FORTHCOMING

 

Reclaim the State
Experiments in Popular Democracy
Hilary Wainwright

The protest movement hounding capitalist elites from Seattle to Cancun and the global outrage at the military aggression of George Bush and Tony Blair are saying more than just ‘no’. They are insisting that another world is possible. But if the momentum of these international movements is to grow, they must be rooted in local action to create greater democratic and economic justice in everyday life.
Hilary Wainwright sets out on a quest to discover how people are creating new, stronger forms of democracy. Her journey starts in the deep south of Brazil, in Porto Allegre, where she explores the wider potential of the ‘participatory budget’, the Workers Party’s radical model for public investment decisions. With the confidence this gives that participatory democracy can work, she goes home and joins residents in East Manchester – the origins of Britain’s industrial revolution – as they test out the British government’s promise of ‘community-led’ regeneration and use public money to try to rebuild shattered neighbourhoods. She hangs out on a young, ‘dream’ estate on the outskirts of the commuter town of Luton where ex-squatters and ravers join with established residents’ groups and local vicars to take control of public resources and forge a new social economy. Finally, in the northern city of Newcastle, she is a fly on the wall as council workers see off an attempt by British Telecom to take over local services and win the battle for a democratic public alternative.
Wainwright concludes with a set of proposals for turning resistance into lasting institutions of participatory democracy – an embedded bargaining power against corporate and military elites. This, she argues, will require very different kinds of political parties from the ones currently alienating voters. Reclaim the State shows that the foundations for new political directions already exist, and provides imaginative and practical tools for building on them.


Of Matters Modern
The Experience of Modernity in Colonial
and Post-colonial South Asia

Editor: Debraj Bhattacharya

This volume brings together essays that probe the experience of modernity in South Asia through narratives of specific issues and/or contexts. The book pushes the argument that South Asia’s experience of modernity has to be understood in connection with a global experience and not in isolation. The essays also critically engage with various concepts that inform debates on modernity.
The specific encounters that have been narrated are:
* The emergence of ‘Assam Fever’ in colonial discourse
* An experiment with fusion music in early colonial India
* The emergence of detective fiction in colonial Punjab
* The search for authenticity among nationalist and postcolonial thinkers
* The critique of the bhadralok by a bhadralok writer
* The experience of modernity in Kolkata during early twentieth century
* The emergence of a cosmopolitan ‘underworld’ in Kolkata during the nineteenth century
* The Italian connections of a Bengali poet, Michael Madhusudan Dutta
* The ambivalence of Sir Syed Ahmad Khan
* The construction of Gandhari in Amar Chitra Katha, a comic strip series for children