Image and Perception of RSS in the Context of Cultivating National Men and Hinduism: An Empirical Study of People's Perception
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55544/ijrah.2.6.10Keywords:
RSS, BJP, Hinduism, NationalismAbstract
It is in some cases said that officers battle the last conflict. Likewise, political investigators will generally observe the latest worldwide scourge in each cultural sickness they experience. During the 1940s and 1950s, numerous libertarian developments and systems were erroneously seen as extremist. During the 1960s and 1970s, various third-world patriot developments were seen as and maintained to be socialist; and since the Iranian upheaval of 1979, fundamentalisms appear to have thrived. More than one of these names has been applied to similar development. In India, Hindu Nationalism was—regularly still is—seen as fundamentalist, especially by its Indian pundits. At the same time, outside spectators have viewed it through and through as too simple to even consider regarding it as what might be compared to Islamic radicalism. Like this, before being inquisitive about the deep underlying hierarchical foundations of strict radicalism in India, we need to initially settle on whether it is strict by any stretch of the imagination.
Downloads
Metrics
References
Srivastava D.P., (2017), Ideology of RSS, 15(1), 2454- 3411
Kalim S., (2020), The RSS, Hindutva and Rising Attacks against Muslims in India WFR SeptOct. 56-71
Kalim S., (2016), A Critical Study of 'Hindu Nationalism' in India. Journal of Business & Economic Policy. 3(2). 9-28
Shida W., (2020), The powerful rise of Hindu Nationalism and its impact, 30(3), 56-74
Ahsan S.B., (2020), Messengers of Hindu Nationalism: How the RSS Reshaped India, Asian Affairs, 51(1), 218-221
Chousalkar A., (2019), Messengers of Hindu nationalism: how the RSS reshaped India, Commonwealth & Comparative Politics, 57(4), 495-497
Roy, P. K., (2017), RSS and the national movement: the language of new think and process of doublethink. Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, 78, 828–834
Desai, R., (2016), Hindutva and fascism, Economic and Political Weekly, l.LI(53), 20-24
Heredia, R.C., (2016), Rehabilitating riot victims: Welfare relief or citizen rights? Economic and Political Weekly, LI (24), 26-27
Komlos, J., (2016), Another road to serfdom, Challenge, 59(6), 491-518
Nagaraj, R., (2017), Economic reforms and manufacturing sector growth: Need for reconfiguring the industrialisation model, Economic and Political Weekly, LII (2), 61-68
Siddiqui, K., (2017), Capital liberalisation and economic instability, Journal of Economics and Political Economy, 4(1), 659-677
Siddiqui, K., (2016c), The economics and politics of Hindu nationalism in India, Asian Profile, 44(6), 497-507
Singh, P., (2015), Institutional communalism in India, Economic and Political Weekly, L (28), 48-56
Tyabji, N., (2015), The politics of industry in Nehru's India, Economic and Political Weekly, L (35), 97-103
Vijayan, P.K., & Gabriel, K., (2015), Hindutva's psychological warfare: The insidious agendas of Ghar Wapsi, Economic and Political Weekly, L (11), 22-24
Ramachandran, S., (2020), Hindutva Violence in India: Trends and Implications. Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses, 12(4), 15–20
Mohammed A., (2020), The rise of Hindu nationalism in historical perspective, India Review, 19(4), 414-425
Kumbamu A., (2020), The Conflux of Hindutva Ultra-Nationalism, Neoliberal Extractivism, and the Rise of Authoritarian Populism in Modi's India, 1, 17
Murray A., (2020), Rising Fascism in India: Case Study of Modi's Regime, 6(2), 273-284
Edwards, L. & Ramamurthy A., (2017), (In)credible India? A Critical Analysis of India's Nation Branding. Communication, Culture & Critique, 10, 322–343
Farooq, M., & Javaid, U., (2020), Suspension of Article 370: Assessment of Modi's Kashmir Masterstroke under Hindutva Ideology. Global Political Review, 5(I), 1-8
Jaffrelot, C., (2015), The Modi-centric BJP 2014 Election Campaign: New Techniques and Old Tactics. Contemporary South Asia 23(2), 151-166
Mukerji, S., (2015), Understanding Urban-Rural Patterns of BJP Campaigning in UP (Lok Sabha Elections 2014). Studies in Indian Politics 3(1), 111-123
Ohm, B., (2015), Organising Popular Discourse with and Against the Media: Notes on the Making of Narendra Modi and Recep Tayyip Erdogan as Leaders-without-alternative. Television & New Media 16 (4), 370–377
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Integrated Journal for Research in Arts and Humanities
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.