11.07.2015 Views

Panjab University - INFLIBNET Centre

Panjab University - INFLIBNET Centre

Panjab University - INFLIBNET Centre

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

[M.A. POLITICAL SCIENCE (SEMESTER SYSTEM) SYLLABUS 6923. Krishna, S. (1994), “Cartrographic Anxiety: Mapping the Body Politics in India,” Alternatives 19 : 507-521.24. Larson, G. J. (1997), India’s Agony Over Religion, Delhi, Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.25. Ludden, D. (1996) (ed.), Making India Hindu : Religion, Community, and the Politics of Democracy in India,Delhi : Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.26. Mahanta, A. (1977), “The Indian State and Patriarchy” in T. V. Satyamurthy (ed.), State and Nation in theContext of Social Change, Delhi, Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.27. Malik, Y.K. and Singh, Y.B. (1994), Hindu Nationalists in India : The Rise of the Bharatiya Janata Party, NewDelhi, Vistaar Publications.28. Mayo, Katherine (1928), Mother India, New York : Harcourt Brace and Company.29. Metcalf, T. R. (1995), Ideologies of the Raj, Cambridge : Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press (The New CambridgeHistory of India).30. Nandy, A. H., Trivedi, S. Mayaram and Yagnik, A. (eds.) (1995), Creating a Nationality : TheRamjanambhumi Movement and the Fear of the Self, Delhi : Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.31. Nehru, J. (1936), An Autobiography, London, John Lane.32. Nehru, J. (1981), The Discovery of India, New Delhi : Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund, Oxford <strong>University</strong>Press (First Published 1946 by the Signet Press, Calcutta).33. Nehru, J. (1956), Independence and After : A Collection of Speeches 1946-1949, Delhi : Government of India.34. Pandey, G. (1990), The Construction of Communalism in Colonial North India, Delhi, Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.35. Pandey, G. (1994) “The Prose of Otherness,” Subaltern Studies (Delhi, OUP, Vol. VIII).36. Parker, G. (1998), “Geopolitical Perspectives on India and Indian Foreign Policy” in The Ford FoundationLectures in International Relations Studies, Departmental of Political Science, The Maharaja Sayajirao<strong>University</strong> of Baroda.37. Pattanaik, D. D. (1998), Hindu Nationalism in India : Conceptual Foundation, New Delhi : Deep and DeepPublications.38. Radhakrishnan, R. (1992), “Nationalism, Gender, and the Narrative of Identity” in Andrew Parker et al (eds.),Nationalism and Sexuality, New York, Sage.39. Sarkar, T. (1996), “Imagining Hindurastra : the Hindu and the Muslim in Bankim Chandra’s Writings” in D.Ludden (ed.), Making India Hindu : Religion, Community, and the Politics of Democracy in India, Delhi :Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.40. Sarkar, T. (1992), “the Hindu Wife and the Hindu Nation : Domesticity and Nationalism in Nineteenth CenturyBengal,” Studies in History (Sage, Delhi) 8 (2).41. Savarkar, V. D. (1969), Hindutva, Bombay, Savarkar Prakashan 5 th Edn.42. Sen, A. (1998a), “On Interpreting India’s Past” in S. Bose and A. Jalal (eds.), Nationalism, Democracy andDevelopment : State and Politics in India, Calcutta : Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press (Oxford India Paperbacks).43. Sen, A. (1998b), “Secularism and its Discontents” in Bhargava, R. (ed.), Secularism and its Critics, Delhi :Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press.44. Varshney, A. (1993), “Contesting Meanings : India’s National Identity, Hindu Nationalism, and the Politics ofAnxiety”, Daedalus, 122, 3 : 227-261.45. Van Hear, N. (1998), New Diasporas : The Mass Exodus, Dispersal and Regrouping of Migrant Communities,London, UCL Press.46. Weiner, M. (1997), “Minority Identity”, in S. Kaviraj (ed.), Politics in India, Delhi, Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press :pp 241-254.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!