
Breakfast with Evil and Other Risky Ventures is a pre-emptive attempt to bring together the scattered writings of Ashis Nandy over his entire span of writing career and scan those scattered lectures, interviews, and writings including essays and columns for newspapers and journals for an in-depth analytical study. As the author himself explains, these are not his musings on static, time-bound issues, rather they capture how he confronts and negotiates the living past in the political, social, and cultural landscape of South Asia-starting from the manmade famine of 1943 to the Partition and freedom of India and the birth of Pakistan in 1947, the Bangladesh War in 1971, and the protracted civil war in Sri Lanka (1983-2009). The essays, often written as forewords to other scholars' works, straddle languages, systems of knowledge, and forms of voice and silence. Nandy attempts to identify a critical and intellectual strategy for survival in the Third World. He establishes that though a traumatic ambience-marred by aggressive development, instant nationalisms, or the brutalizing spectacles of modern nation-states-numbs one's imagination, it can also lead to new worldviews and multiple creative forms of resistance.
This collection investigates how intellectual strategies for survival and creative resistance emerge within the traumatic political and cultural landscapes of the Third World. Professor Ashis Nandy, a prominent political psychologist and social theorist, compiles a diverse array of lectures, interviews, and columns to examine the intersection of memory and modernity in South Asia. He argues that while aggressive development and modern nation-states often suppress the imagination, they simultaneously provide the necessary friction to generate alternative worldviews and forms of resistance.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and readers frequently note the dense, interdisciplinary nature of Nandy's prose, which blends political theory with cultural critique. Experts highlight this collection as a significant resource for understanding the author's long-standing intellectual engagement with the complexities of post-colonial identity.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
2021-01-11
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190120924
ISBN-13:
9780190120924
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