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10 - A. R. Desai’s Marxist Critique of Nationalism and of the Indian Nation-State

Towards a Reframing of Sociology as Social Science*

from Part III - Dissident Sociologists

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2025

Anaheed Al-Hardan
Affiliation:
Howard University
Julian Go
Affiliation:
University of Chicago
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Summary

This chapter assesses the critique of Indian anticolonial nationalism by A. R. Desai, a Marxist sociologist during the post-independence period (1950s to 1990s). By initiating a debate on the class orientation of Indian nationalism and analyzing the exploitative capitalist processes by the nation-state in post-independence India, Desai overturned the complex and convoluted relationship between anticolonial thought, nationalism, coloniality, and social science scholarship in India. He confronted the existing social anthropological and structural functionalist school of thought dominating sociology in the early years after independence while his project of Marxist historical sociology contributed to the creation of new areas of research for sociology in India. The chapter also highlights some of the limitations in Desai’s scholarship and suggests that his sociology was about opening up new areas of research rather than doing a rigorous Marxist analysis of class relations.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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