Twilight Prisoners: The Rise of the Hindu Right and the Decline of India

Author :

Siddhartha Deb

Publisher:

Context

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Publisher

Context

Publication Year 2024
ISBN-13

9789360452902

ISBN-10 9360452904
Binding

Hardcover

Number of Pages 232 Pages
Language (English)
Weight (grms) 415
Subject

Politics & Government

‘TWILIGHT PRISONERS IS IN A CLASS OF ITS OWN, GOING DEEPER THAN ANYONE ELSE DARES INTO THE HISTORY OF INDIA’S CRIMES AGAINST ITS PEOPLE. IN ITS PORTRAITS OF TITANIC CONTEMPORARY FIGURES OF RESISTANCE, IT ALSO PROVIDES SOMETHING VANISHINGLY RARE: A MARGIN OF HOPE. A GREAT AND NECESSARY BOOK.’ ―NIKIL SAVAL An incisive, lyrical, and deeply reported account of India’s descent into authoritarianism. Traveling across India, interviewing Hindu zealots, armed insurgents, jailed dissidents, and politicians and thinkers from across the political spectrum, Siddhartha Deb reveals a country in which forces old and new have aligned to endanger democracy. The result is an absorbing―and disturbing―portrait. India has become a religious fundamentalist dystopia, one depicted here with a novelist’s precise language and eye for detail. Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his party―a formation explicitly drawing on European fascism―has deftly exploited modern technologies, the media, and market forces to launch a relentless campaign on minorities, women, dissenters, and the poor. Deb profiles these people, as well as those fighting back, including writers, scholars, and journalists. Twilight Prisoners sounds the alarm now that the world’s largest democracy is under threat in ways that echo the fissures in the United States, United Kingdom, and so-called democracies the world over.

Siddhartha Deb

Born in north-eastern India, Siddhartha Deb lives in Harlem, New York. His fiction and nonfiction books have been longlisted for the International Dublin Literary Award (An Outline of the Republic), shortlisted for the Orwell Prize, and received the PEN Open award (The Beautiful and the Damned). A contributing editor to The New Republic, Deb’s journalism and essays appear in The Guardian, The New York Times, The Baffler, n+1, The Nation, and Dissent. His new novel The Light at the End of the World will be published in spring 2023.
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