Abstract
Th e public sphere has been centre stage in celebrations of India’s political triumphs.
Leading commentators tell us that the astonishing post-independence surge of
democracy has been contingent on the rise of a new kind of sociopolitical formation:
the public sphere. Th is paper takes a closer look at the popular deliberative terrain in
North India to question this claim. Drawing on research conducted in a provincial town
in the North Indian state of Rajasthan, we see that where metropolitan political theorists see ‘transparency’ as promoting discursive and political possibilities, Rajasthani villagers see an exposure which prevents expression, communication and the making of political choices. In their view, it is secrecy and social seclusion that enable political interactions and elicit political judgments. ‘Th e public sphere’ is an unfit heuristic for locating popular politics within (and beyond) Rajasthan, where it obscures much more than it reveals.
Leading commentators tell us that the astonishing post-independence surge of
democracy has been contingent on the rise of a new kind of sociopolitical formation:
the public sphere. Th is paper takes a closer look at the popular deliberative terrain in
North India to question this claim. Drawing on research conducted in a provincial town
in the North Indian state of Rajasthan, we see that where metropolitan political theorists see ‘transparency’ as promoting discursive and political possibilities, Rajasthani villagers see an exposure which prevents expression, communication and the making of political choices. In their view, it is secrecy and social seclusion that enable political interactions and elicit political judgments. ‘Th e public sphere’ is an unfit heuristic for locating popular politics within (and beyond) Rajasthan, where it obscures much more than it reveals.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 104-122 |
Journal | Cambridge Anthropology |
Volume | 31 |
Issue number | 2 |
Publication status | Published - 15 Jan 2013 |