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  • Cited by 24
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
August 2015
Print publication year:
2015
Online ISBN:
9781316154953

Book description

Muslim Belonging in Secular India surveys the experience of some of India's most prominent Muslim communities in the early postcolonial period. Muslims who remained in India after the Partition of 1947 faced distrust and discrimination, and were consequently compelled to seek new ways of defining their relationship with fellow citizens of India and its governments. Using the forcible integration of the princely state of Hyderabad in 1948 as a case study, Taylor C. Sherman reveals the fragile and contested nature of Muslim belonging in the decade that followed independence. In this context, she demonstrates how Muslim claims to citizenship in Hyderabad contributed to intense debates over the nature of democracy and secularism in independent India. Drawing on detailed new archival research, Dr Sherman provides a thorough and compelling examination of the early governmental policies and popular strategies that have helped to shape the history of Muslims in India since 1947.

Reviews

'No work has set out so thoroughly the problems, indeed the agony, of those Muslims who remained in India after Partition in 1947. This is a first-class piece of research.'

Francis Robinson - Royal Holloway, University of London

'This engaging examination of the changes that followed Hyderabad's incorporation illuminates the characteristics of citizenship and secularism in early post-independence India.'

Ian Talbot - University of Southampton

'Taylor C. Sherman’s book marks an important intervention in contemporary debates over citizenship, belonging, democracy and nationalism.'

Asma Rasheed Source: The Book Review

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Contents

Select bibliography

Private papers

  • N. Gopalaswamy Ayyangar papers, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library

  • Burugula Ramakrishna Rao papers, Andhra Pradesh State Archives

Official manuscript sources

  • Andhra Pradesh State Archives, Hyderabad

  • India Office Records, British Library, London

  • National Archives of India, New Delhi

  • National Archives of the United Kingdom, London

Official reports

Census of India 1941: Volume XXI HEH The Nizam’s Dominions (Hyderabad State) (New Delhi: Government of India, 1945).
Census of India 1951 volume IX: Hyderabad, Part I-A Report (New Delhi: Government of India, 1952–5).
Hyderabad Reborn: The First Six Months of Freedom, September 18, 1948–March 17, 1949 (Hyderabad: Government of Hyderabad, 1949).
Millions on the Move: The Aftermath of Partition, (New Delhi: Government of India, 1948).
Report of the Administrative Reforms Committee (Hyderabad: Government of Andhra Pradesh, 1960).
Report of the Anti-Corruption Enquiry Committee (Hyderabad: Government of Hyderabad, 1954).
Report of the States Reorganisation Commission (New Delhi: Government of India, 1955).
Statistical Report on General Elections to the Lok Sabha, vol. I (New Delhi: Government of India, 1952).
White Paper on Hyderabad (New Delhi: Government of India, 1948).

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