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Self-Rule and the Problem of Peoplehood in Colonial India

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  • SULTAN, NAZMUL S.

Abstract

This article theorizes the colonial problem of peoplehood that Indian anticolonial thinkers grappled with in their attempts to conceptualize self-rule, or swaraj. British colonial rule drew its legitimacy from a developmentalist conception of the colonized people as backward and disunited. The discourse of “underdeveloped” colonial peoplehood rendered the Indian people “unfit” for self-government, suspending their sovereignty to an indefinite future. The concept of swaraj would be born with the rejection of deferred colonial self-government. Yet the persistence of the developmentalist figuration of the people generated a crisis of sovereign authorization. The pre-Gandhian swaraj theorists would be faced with the not-yet claimable figure of the people at the very moment of disavowing the British claim to rule. Recovering this underappreciated pre-Gandhian history of the concept of swaraj and reinterpreting its Gandhian moment, this article offers a new reading of Gandhi's theory of moral self-rule. In so doing, it demonstrates how the history of swaraj helps trace the colonial career of popular sovereignty.

Suggested Citation

  • Sultan, Nazmul S., 2020. "Self-Rule and the Problem of Peoplehood in Colonial India," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 114(1), pages 81-94, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:114:y:2020:i:1:p:81-94_7
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