Image from Google Jackets

Unforeignness: Commonwealth rule and imperial citizenship/ Zaki Nahaboo

By: Material type: TextText 2024Subject(s): Online resources: In: Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Volume 37, Number 3, 2024, Page: 296-314Summary: This article introduces Anglocentric unforeignness and postcolonial unforeignness as organising signifiers and objects of historical inquiry. Expressions of unforeignness offer terms of Commonwealth pluralism-solidarism by configuring, rather than overcoming, imperial citizenship and colonial self-government. Anglocentric unforeignness strived for common political agendas and affective unity across, and for, the “White” British Empire. In contrast, postcolonial unforeignness projected Commonwealth agendas that were irreducible to Anglocentric ends. These articulations of unforeignness are traced through divergent ways of imagining India as part of a Commonwealth. The first section of the article develops the parameters for inquiry by drawing upon Colin Koopman’s notion of ‘problematisation’. Second, Ramchandra Ghanesh Pradhan’s critique of Lionel Curtis’s imperial federation is discussed. The critique reveals an early twentieth century iteration of postcolonial unforeignness. Third, the article investigates when Jawaharlal Nehru’s terms of Commonwealth association and dominion state building preserved imperial administration. This illustrates a configuration of postcolonial unforeignness during India’s dominion period.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Journal Mindef Library & Info Centre Journals UNFOREIGNNESS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan

This article introduces Anglocentric unforeignness and postcolonial unforeignness as organising signifiers and objects of historical inquiry. Expressions of unforeignness offer terms of Commonwealth pluralism-solidarism by configuring, rather than overcoming, imperial citizenship and colonial self-government. Anglocentric unforeignness strived for common political agendas and affective unity across, and for, the “White” British Empire. In contrast, postcolonial unforeignness projected Commonwealth agendas that were irreducible to Anglocentric ends. These articulations of unforeignness are traced through divergent ways of imagining India as part of a Commonwealth. The first section of the article develops the parameters for inquiry by drawing upon Colin Koopman’s notion of ‘problematisation’. Second, Ramchandra Ghanesh Pradhan’s critique of Lionel Curtis’s imperial federation is discussed. The critique reveals an early twentieth century iteration of postcolonial unforeignness. Third, the article investigates when Jawaharlal Nehru’s terms of Commonwealth association and dominion state building preserved imperial administration. This illustrates a configuration of postcolonial unforeignness during India’s dominion period.

UNFOREIGNNESS, RULE, IMPERIAL CITIZENSHIP

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.