Lalgarh and the legend of Kishanji : tales from India's Maoist movement
Material type: TextPublication details: Noida Harper Collins 2016Description: 319pISBN: 9789352640942Subject(s): Naxalite movement | Revolutionaries | India | Politics and government | CommunismDDC classification: 335.4095414 Summary: 'India is an unbroken chain of broken promises.'In 2009, Lalgarh in West Bengal exploded on to the national consciousness. A tribal upsurge against police atrocities escalated into fierce, full-fledged guerrilla warfare against the Indian state. Kishanji, the Maoist leader, who had successfully led the movement in Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Bihar, was in charge. He masterminded military offensives that shook the state, supervised 'alternative development activities' and repeatedly escaped security dragnets. But what truly confounded the state were his telephonic interviews with the media, often on live television, and the frequent press conferences. Kishanji was indeed the face of the Maoist movement in India - until the tables turned.Snigdhendu Bhattacharya was on the ground in Lalgarh, meeting Kishanji, speaking to Maoists and reporting on one of the bloodiest Naxal uprisings as it unfolded, right up to its sudden, chilling end. This is an epic tale of war not only between the state and the Maoists but also between a callous state and its desperate citizens.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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BK | Stack | 335.4095414 SNI/L (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 53934 |
Browsing Kannur University Central Library shelves, Shelving location: Stack Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
335.40954 DIS Discourses on naxalite movement, 1967-2009 : insights into radical left politics | 335.40954 HIS.1 History of the communist movement in India: the formative years 1920-1933 | 335.40954137 CHO/L Let's call him Vasu: with the Maoists in Chhattisgarh | 335.4095414 SNI/L Lalgarh and the legend of Kishanji : tales from India's Maoist movement | 335.41 DUS/T Towards an unknown Marx :a commentary on the manuscripts of 1861-63 | 335.411 THO/M Marxism and scientific socialism : from Engels to Althusser | 335.412 HOL/F Friedrich Engels and Marxian political economy |
'India is an unbroken chain of broken promises.'In 2009, Lalgarh in West Bengal exploded on to the national consciousness. A tribal upsurge against police atrocities escalated into fierce, full-fledged guerrilla warfare against the Indian state. Kishanji, the Maoist leader, who had successfully led the movement in Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Bihar, was in charge. He masterminded military offensives that shook the state, supervised 'alternative development activities' and repeatedly escaped security dragnets. But what truly confounded the state were his telephonic interviews with the media, often on live television, and the frequent press conferences. Kishanji was indeed the face of the Maoist movement in India - until the tables turned.Snigdhendu Bhattacharya was on the ground in Lalgarh, meeting Kishanji, speaking to Maoists and reporting on one of the bloodiest Naxal uprisings as it unfolded, right up to its sudden, chilling end. This is an epic tale of war not only between the state and the Maoists but also between a callous state and its desperate citizens.
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