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Savarkar before Hindutva: Sovereignty, Republicanism and Populism in India, c. 1900-1920

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posted on 2022-07-04, 10:52 authored by Vikram Visana
Vinayak Damodar Savarkar was the theorizer of Hindutva (1923)—the project to radically reconfigure India as a Hindu majoritarian state. Assessments of Savarkar's earlier The Indian War of Independence (1909), a history of the 1857 Indian “Mutiny,” have generally subsumed this tract into the logic of Hindutva. This article offers a reassessment of The Indian War of Independence and situates it within the political and intellectual context of fin de siècle western India. I suggest that this history of Indian rebellion propagated a novel iteration of Indian popular sovereignty predicated on Hindu–Muslim unity. I read Savarkar as adapting the ideas of Giuseppe Mazzini and Johann Kaspar Bluntschli to challenge what he regarded as the fissiparous logic of late colonial liberalism. Finally, this article argues that Savarkar's account of the mutual constitution of general will and the personalism of sovereignty must be read as a previously unacknowledged instance of Indian populism.

History

Citation

Modern Intellectual History , Volume 18 , Issue 4 , December 2021 , pp. 1106 - 1129 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1479244320000384

Author affiliation

School of History, Politics and International Relations, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Modern Intellectual History

Volume

18

Issue

4

Pagination

1106 - 1129

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

issn

1479-2443

eissn

1479-2451

Copyright date

2021

Language

en

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