Rajiv Gandhi to Narendra Modi: Broken Polity, Flickering Reforms

Author:   Parsa Venkateshwar Rao Jr
Publisher:   SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd
ISBN:  

9789353282981


Pages:   244
Publication Date:   18 February 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Rajiv Gandhi to Narendra Modi: Broken Polity, Flickering Reforms


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Overview

For the first time, the political story of India from the mid-1980s to the second decade of the present century is reconstructed through the first-person narratives of political leaders, revealing their inmost thoughts in their public utterances, offering weak arguments for their unforgivable lapses, speaking in eloquent terms of their achievements and sometimes showing uncharacteristic humility in what they said in their public speeches, in the Lok Sabha, in their blogs. From Rajiv Gandhi’s confession about how and why he came into politics, Narendra Modi’s graphic description of his inner agony during the Gujarat riots, Vajpayee’s disarming confession about Nehru, Narasimha Rao’s stoic stance in a letter to his childhood friend, Advani’s confessions in the Lok Sabha about why television was pressed into service during the Kargil War, what emerges is a historical drama of Shakespearean range and an intensity which is more than what brilliant historians and acute political analysts can hope to achieve. The book shows that the first draft of history is found in the words of politicians in parliament and in the government. It captures the immediacy of history-in-the-making, and the palest platitudes of politicians that acquire rare poignancy.

Full Product Details

Author:   Parsa Venkateshwar Rao Jr
Publisher:   SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd
Imprint:   SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd
Weight:   0.320kg
ISBN:  

9789353282981


ISBN 10:   9353282985
Pages:   244
Publication Date:   18 February 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Meghnad Desai Preface Acknowledgements Midnight’s Children: Rajiv Gandhi, Narendra Modi Economic Reforms: Precursor to Inheritor Rajiv’s Camelot: Blink of a Dream Rajiv’s Fall: Furies Unleashed Traumatic Turn Ending the Free Fall Winds of Change Ayodhya Agony Apologetics of Vandalism BJP’s Moment of Truth Romancing Pakistan The Bomb Gambit Love and War General Bluffs: Agra Blues Modi’s Inferno Sonia’s Revenge Manmohan’s Finest Hour Spectre of Corruption The Short Long March Missing Crescendo Epilogue: Dream and Reality Suggested Readings

Reviews

...this book is definite guide to the myriad political phenomena and will be of much use for those who want to be on familiar terms with India's opinionated developments in past thirty years. -- Book Review, 4 September 2019 Serves as a guide to politics...narration powerful enough to glue the reader...lacks the ability to keep a balance...but reading the book is worthy. -- Readerfromastar Let this book be your companion and guide as you try to make sense of the forthcoming tumultuous events in Indian politics. -- Lord Meghnad Desai, * Economist, author and politician * Tough-minded journalism demands a sense of openness, a power of judgement and a ruthless sense of professionalism. It requires both a relentless sense of facts and an unflagging sense of judgement. Parsa Rao combines these qualities in a book that traverses across two eras, the age of Rajiv Gandhi and the Modi era. In comparing the two, he creates a choreography of different styles of politics, bringing out the differences and limits of each era. Rao is demanding as a writer, insisting that the reader think through the book with him. Quietly nuanced, the book is an invitation to rethink the fate of policy, politics and democracy. A narrative which spans 35 years of politics captures every moment of change from Rajiv's assassination, Babri, the Gujarat riots to Modi's ascent, Rao creates a tough titrated vision of political dynamics. A distilled insight into a noisy era full of drama of possibilities and limits. -- Shiv Visvanathan, * Professor, O.P. Jindal Global University, Haryana * Tough-minded journalism demands a sense of openness, a power of judgement and a ruthless sense of professionalism. It requires both a relentless sense of facts and an unflagging sense of judgement. Parsa Rao combines these qualities in a book that traverses across two eras, the age of Rajiv Gandhi and the Modi era. In comparing the two, he creates a choreography of different styles of politics, bringing out the differences and limits of each era. Rao is demanding as a writer, insisting that the reader think through the book with him. Quietly nuanced, the book is an invitation to rethink the fate of policy, politics and democracy. A narrative which spans 35 years of politics captures every moment of change from Rajiv's assassination, Babri, the Gujarat riots to Modi's ascent, Rao creates a tough titrated vision of political dynamics. A distilled insight into a noisy era full of drama of possibilities and limits. -- Shiv Visvanathan, * Professor, O.P. Jindal Global University, Haryana * The past shapes the present in both direct and tangential ways and provides an understanding of our times. Combining the strengths of a scholar of politics and that of an observer journalist, Parsa Venkateshwar Rao Jr seeks to capture a crucial period in India's political history, bookended by two prime ministers, Rajiv Gandhi and Narendra Modi. The book provides important insights into the often overlapping processes of economic reforms and political Hinduism that came to dominate this three-decade period in ways that irrevocably changed India. -- Pamela Philipose, * Public Editor, The Wire * Parsa Venkateshwar Rao describes India's turbulent history of the past decades but concentrating almost exclusively on economic reforms and the rise of Hindu fundamentalism, the first portrayed as necessary and the second as populist electoral adventurism. Concentrating on policy statements and debates, he ventures into the unenviable look of assessing contemporary history. Philosophers warn that the owl of Minerva's wisdom flies after the twilight. Parsa wants us to turn to present continuities. He does this with acuity. This book should be read by those who know and need to review what they know and those who want to know. -- Rajeev Dhavan, * Supreme Court Advocate * Parsa Venkateshwar Rao offers a lucid and wide-ranging analysis of the momentous changes that have transformed the Indian economy and society and the challenges that the political system has to cope with after economic reforms and the rise of majoritarianism. Written in an accessible and cogent style, this book will serve as a useful introduction for understanding some of the key political developments that have impacted democracy in the last 30 years. -- Zoya Hasan, * Professor Emerita, Centre for Political Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University?, New Delhi *


Written in an accessible and cogent style, this book will serve as a useful introduction for understanding some of the key political developments that have impacted democracy in the last 30 years. -- Zoya Hasan, * Professor Emerita, Centre for Political Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University?, New Delhi * Let this book be your companion and guide as you try to make sense of the forthcoming tumultuous events in Indian politics. -- Lord Meghnad Desai, * Economist, author and politician *


Let this book be your companion and guide as you try to make sense of the forthcoming tumultuous events in Indian politics. -- Lord Meghnad Desai, * Economist, author and politician * Tough-minded journalism demands a sense of openness, a power of judgement and a ruthless sense of professionalism. It requires both a relentless sense of facts and an unflagging sense of judgement. Parsa Rao combines these qualities in a book that traverses across two eras, the age of Rajiv Gandhi and the Modi era. In comparing the two, he creates a choreography of different styles of politics, bringing out the differences and limits of each era. Rao is demanding as a writer, insisting that the reader think through the book with him. Quietly nuanced, the book is an invitation to rethink the fate of policy, politics and democracy. A narrative which spans 35 years of politics captures every moment of change from Rajiv's assassination, Babri, the Gujarat riots to Modi's ascent, Rao creates a tough titrated vision of political dynamics. A distilled insight into a noisy era full of drama of possibilities and limits. -- Shiv Visvanathan, * Professor, O.P. Jindal Global University, Haryana * Tough-minded journalism demands a sense of openness, a power of judgement and a ruthless sense of professionalism. It requires both a relentless sense of facts and an unflagging sense of judgement. Parsa Rao combines these qualities in a book that traverses across two eras, the age of Rajiv Gandhi and the Modi era. In comparing the two, he creates a choreography of different styles of politics, bringing out the differences and limits of each era. Rao is demanding as a writer, insisting that the reader think through the book with him. Quietly nuanced, the book is an invitation to rethink the fate of policy, politics and democracy. A narrative which spans 35 years of politics captures every moment of change from Rajiv's assassination, Babri, the Gujarat riots to Modi's ascent, Rao creates a tough titrated vision of political dynamics. A distilled insight into a noisy era full of drama of possibilities and limits. -- Shiv Visvanathan, * Professor, O.P. Jindal Global University, Haryana * The past shapes the present in both direct and tangential ways and provides an understanding of our times. Combining the strengths of a scholar of politics and that of an observer journalist, Parsa Venkateshwar Rao Jr seeks to capture a crucial period in India's political history, bookended by two prime ministers, Rajiv Gandhi and Narendra Modi. The book provides important insights into the often overlapping processes of economic reforms and political Hinduism that came to dominate this three-decade period in ways that irrevocably changed India. -- Pamela Philipose, * Public Editor, The Wire * Parsa Venkateshwar Rao describes India's turbulent history of the past decades but concentrating almost exclusively on economic reforms and the rise of Hindu fundamentalism, the first portrayed as necessary and the second as populist electoral adventurism. Concentrating on policy statements and debates, he ventures into the unenviable look of assessing contemporary history. Philosophers warn that the owl of Minerva's wisdom flies after the twilight. Parsa wants us to turn to present continuities. He does this with acuity. This book should be read by those who know and need to review what they know and those who want to know. -- Rajeev Dhavan, * Supreme Court Advocate * Parsa Venkateshwar Rao offers a lucid and wide-ranging analysis of the momentous changes that have transformed the Indian economy and society and the challenges that the political system has to cope with after economic reforms and the rise of majoritarianism. Written in an accessible and cogent style, this book will serve as a useful introduction for understanding some of the key political developments that have impacted democracy in the last 30 years. -- Zoya Hasan, * Professor Emerita, Centre for Political Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University?, New Delhi *


Author Information

Hyderabad-born (1953), New Delhi-based journalist Parsa Venkateshwar Rao Jr has worked with The Indian Express, India Today, The Gulf Today (Sharjah), The Straits Times (Singapore), tehelka.com and DNA (Daily News and Analysis). He has written for Gulf News (Dubai), The Daily Star (Beirut), Today (Singapore), Deccan Herald (Bengaluru), the New Indian Express, The Asian Age, Deccan Chronicle and The Times of India. His earlier books include Mullah Omar and Robespierre: Essays in the Politics of Ideas (2005), Lokpal: Facts & Arguments (2011), Indian Politics Since 1991: Reforms and Revivalism (2013) and the Emergency: An Unpopular History (2017). At present, he is the Political Editor of Parliamentarian, a monthly political magazine, and a freelance journalist.

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