Bangalore Girls by Supriya Baily, Hardcover, 9781538198018 | Buy online at Moby the Great

Bangalore Girls

Witnessing the Rise of Nationalism in a Progressive City

Author: Supriya Baily  

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Summary

Through conversations with the author’s former classmates, Bangalore Girls reveals how the freedom women once enjoyed in the β€œSilicon Valley of India” has been eroded by the rising tide of right-wing nationalism, misogyny, and religious fundamentalism.

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Description

Through the stories of a group of school girls in what used to be India’s most progressive city, Bangalore Girls reveals how the freedom women once enjoyed in the β€œSilicon Valley of India” has been eroded by the rising tide of right-wing nationalism, misogyny, and religious fundamentalism.

Author Supriya Baily explores one of India’s most dynamic cities through the eyes of a group of women who grew up and went to school together in the late 1980s and early 1990s. As they enjoyed the trappings of a burgeoning middle class, these classmates also watched their country move to the right politically and socially, spurred on by the Ayodhya riots that tore down the Babri Masjid Mosque in 1992 and the sectarian violence that followedβ€”a Hindu nationalist tide that continues to rise today.

The book offers us a window into these women’s lives and shows us how they are responding to the breakdown of progressivism across multiple domains. They discuss not only their own safety and the educational opportunities and challenges confronting their families; they also talk about such society-wide issues as anti-Muslim sentiment, the backlash against science, and the dangers of independent thinking. Baily gives voice to their worries about political cults of personality and government policies that seek to marginalize and ostracize anyone who speaks out against the authorities, but especially women.

As Indian prime minister Narendra Modi now consecrates the new Ram Temple in Ayodhya, it has never been more important to understand the wave of nationalism that began in 1992. The stories of these women told by Supriya Baily are a must-read tale of extremism’s threat to women’s rights and human rights.

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Critic Reviews

Bailyrsquo;s impressive Bangalore Girls illuminates ominous changes brought on by the rise of Hindu nationalism in the lives of womenmdash;Bailyrsquo;s former classmatesmdash;in the once-progressive city of Bangalore, India. Sharing stories through the eyes of these women makes the challenges of contemporary India come alive for the reader. Baily also uses their experiences to raise flags about the rise of nationalism and misogyny in many places around the worldmdash;indeed, as she notes, lsquo;we are all Bangalore girls.rsquo;--Anne Holton, former First Lady of Virginia and former Virginia Secretary of Education
The Bangalore Girls, who Supriya Baily describes in this readable, informative, timely book, were her classmates at the Baldwin Girlsrsquo; High School. Bailyrsquo;s interviews with the class of rsquo;89 provide fascinating and sobering insights into how Hindu Nationalists have undermined Bangalorersquo;s secular, democratic, cosmopolitan identity and threatened the freedom of women and minorities.--Amrita Basu, Amherst College

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About the Author

Supriya Baily is an activist, a scholar, and an educator. Born in the US Midwest, she spent her formative teenage years in Bangalore, where she worked as a community organizer and student leader. Returning to the United States, she received a BA in social work, an MA in international development studies, and a PhD in international education. She is currently professor of education at George Mason University in northern Virginia.

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Product Details

Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield
Published
5th November 2024
Format
Hardcover
Pages
218
ISBN
9781538198018

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