Non-Fiction Books:

Knowledge, Power and Ignorance

The Indian Context
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Hardback
$430.00
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Description

What is knowledge, and ignorance? How is it decided? Do power and power relations influence this process? Does the spread of knowledge lead to more ignorance? Is ignorance socially produced? Is knowledge always socially contextualized? This book deals with these important questions on the interplay of knowledge, ignorance and power located in varied contexts in India. As systematic knowledge grows, so does the possibility of ignorance. Ignorance is a state which people attribute to others and is loaded with moral judgment. Thus, being underdeveloped often ‘implies a kind of stupidity or failure’. This volume seeks to be premised in a framework where ignorance is understood as being a socially produced and maintained phenomenon, where the ways of knowing and not knowing are interdependent. It is a novel attempt for an academic re-orientation of the Knowledge–Ignorance paradigm through a process of re-interpretation of the bounded purview attached with the existing epistemological understandings. It focuses on concrete case studies, often with an ethnographic stint. The volume critically looks at various aspects: Epistemological Issues; Understanding Community Perspectives and the State; Natural Resources, Power and Ignorance; Media and Production of Non-Knowledge; and other emerging areas. Each essay bears a striking similarity – that of understanding the complex processes and dynamics of the production of ignorance in a field of commonly held beliefs of 'knowledge' - be it scientific, societal, religious, magical or political - through the overarching realm of power. This interdisciplinary volume will be of interest to a cross-section of academics and students of sociology, social anthropology, political science, human geography, history, public policy and development studies.

Author Biography:

Bidhan Kanti Das is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the Institute of Development Studies Kolkata (IDSK). He has been teaching development studies for last 15 years and is also engaged in research in local forest management, and problems of marginalized communities. He has published research articles in national and international journal of repute. Gorky Chakraborty is faculty at Institute of Development Studies Kolkata (IDSK), working on issues related to the development of North East India. Abhijit Guha is a former Professor of Anthropology at Vidyasagar University. He acted as an expert of the Standing Committee on Rural Development of the Lok Sabha in 2008,advising on the Land Acquisition and Resettlement and Rehabilitation Amendment Bills. He is also the author of Encountering Land Grab: An Ethnographic Journey (2022).
Release date NZ
June 7th, 2024
Audience
  • Tertiary Education (US: College)
Contributors
  • Edited by Abhijit Guha
  • Edited by Bidhan Kanti Das
  • Edited by Gorky Chakraborty
Illustrations
5 Tables, black and white; 7 Line drawings, black and white; 7 Illustrations, black and white
Pages
266
ISBN-13
9781032495590
Product ID
38545690

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