Publications
VIOLENCE AS POLITICAL DISCOURSE
Sikh Militancy Confronts the Indian State
The problem of
Sikh militancy during the 1980s not only rocked the nation
but assumed international significance. A voluminous literature
is available under the titles of Punjab problem or crises,
all condemning violence. Those on the sides of the state held
the militants responsible for violence and those being soft
towards the militants fixed the responsibility on the Indian
state. But none of these studies focussed on the violence
per se. What was the nature of violence? Who perpetrated it?
And why violence at all?
For the first time an attempt
has been made to understand the Punjab problem through an
understanding of violence. It is an exercise to approach the
problem from the perspective of the 'condemned other', the
militant. Why did they take to violence? Or whom did they
inflict the violence? Was there a logic in the violence? How
did they legitimize violence? And, to what purpose? etc.
The present study looks at the
violence in the form of a discourse between two opposing camps,
the Sikh militants and the Indian state. An analysis of the
nature and type of violence spread over a span of a decade
a half resulting in the emergence of distinct patterns. And,
matching these patterns on the two sides proved meaningful
that are later explained in terms of the economic, political,
legal-administrative, social, cultural, religious and historical
aspects of the Punjabi society.
ISBN: 81-7986-006-X Rs. 350
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