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About this book
In vivid, inventive, and engaging prose, Pandian weaves together ethnographic encounters, archival investigations, and elements drawn from Tamil poetry, prose, and popular cinema. Tacking deftly between ploughed soils and plundered orchards, schoolroom lessons and stationhouse registers, household hearths and riverine dams, he reveals moral life in the postcolonial present as a palimpsest of traces inherited from multiple pasts. Pursuing these legacies through the fragmentary play of desire, dream, slander, and counsel, Pandian calls attention not only to the moral potential of ordinary existence, but also to the inescapable force of accident, chance, and failure in the making of ethical lives. Rarely are the moral coordinates of modern power sketched with such intimacy and delicacy.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Note on Transliteration
- 1. "A Rough Spade for a Rugged Landscape": On Savage Selves and More Civil Places
- 2. "What Remains of the Harvest When the Fence Grazes the Crop?": On the Proper Violence of Agrarian Citizenship
- 3. "The Life of the Thief Leaves the Belly Always Boiling": On the Nature and Restraint of the Criminal Animal
- 4. "Millets Sown Yield Millets, Evil Sown Yields Evil": On the Moral Returns of Agrarian Toil
- 5. "Let the Water for the Paddy Also Irrigate the Grass": On the Sympathies of an Aqueous Self
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index