Intimate geopolitics: love, territory, and the future on India's northern threshold

"Intimate Geopolitics is a story about territory. The stories of love and marriage that play out in the book are caught up in and revealing of global processes, which define "insiders" and "outsiders" in relation to borders and national identity, through the regulation of ma...

Full description

Saved in:  
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smith, Sara 1974- (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
Subito Delivery Service: Order now.
Check availability: HBZ Gateway
Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: New Brunswick, NJ Newark, New Jersey London Rutgers University Press [2020]
In:Year: 2020
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Ladakh / Religion / Wedding ceremony / Family
Further subjects:B Gender-specific role
B India Social life and customs
B Religious identity
B Geopolitics Religious identity (India)
B Geopolitics
B Einflussgröße
B Population group
B Ethnic group
B India
B Geopolitics (India)
B Cause
B Identity
B Marriage
Online Access: Inhaltsverzeichnis (Aggregator)
Description
Summary:"Intimate Geopolitics is a story about territory. The stories of love and marriage that play out in the book are caught up in and revealing of global processes, which define "insiders" and "outsiders" in relation to borders and national identity, through the regulation of marriage, intimacy, love, and children. In Ladakh, a culturally Tibetan region in India's Jammu and Kashmir state, 11,000 feet above sea level, and only a few hundred miles from the disputed Pakistan border, inter-religious marriages are informally banned today--bodies are understood as part of a struggle to manage future voting blocs, and thus, territory itself. Using the threat of Muslim population growth, Ladakhi Buddhist activists are encouraging Buddhist women to give up family planning and have as many children as possible, to guarantee a demographic future for Buddhists. Religious identity has been bound to a struggle to control the region through management of its demography one body at a time. When religion, population, and voting blocs are implicitly tied to territorial sovereignty, marriage across religious boundaries becomes a geopolitical problem. Smith argues that time--temporality--should be worked into our understanding of both marriage and territory to show that territory is alive and embodied, and that by attending to the life of territory and its temporal dimension, we gain a much richer and complex understanding of what it means to claim space, both for the present and the future. Demography is anything but abstract--it is the decisions and experiences that are most intimate: birth, marriage, movement across borders, and death. These sites are where geopolitical strategy is animated and made material"--
Item Description:Tabellen
Literaturangaben Seite 147-150
Literaturhinweise Seite 151-163
Register Seite 165-168
Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN:0813598575