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Gandhi After 9/11: Creative Nonviolence and Sustainability

Gandhi After 9/11: Creative Nonviolence and Sustainability

Douglas Allen
718 845 (15% off)
ISBN 13
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9780199491490
Year
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2019
Contents: 1. Introduction: The Relevance of Gandhi for India and the Contemporary World. 2. Gandhian Philosophy: Theoretical Basis with Primacy of Practice. 3. Is Gandhi a Vedantist? 4. How Can Gandhi Interpret His Favorite Bhagavad-Gita as a Gospel of Nonviolence? 5. Personal Reflections on Reading Hind Swaraj and Indian Reactions. 6. Is Gandhi s Approach to Technology Irrelevant in the Modern Age of Technology? 7. Terrorism and Violence: Gandhi after 9/11 in the USA and 26/11 in India. 8. Gandhi and Socialism. 9. Rewriting Marginality: Minority Literature, Hermeneutical Insights and Gandhian Challenges. Index. 9/11 marked the beginning of a century that is defined by widespread violence. Every other day seems to be a furthering of the already catastrophic present towards a more disastrous tomorrow. With climate change looming over us, frequent economic instability, religious wars, and relentless political mayhem, life for what we have made of it seems more and more unsustainable. Douglas Allen insists that we look to Gandhi, if only selectively and creatively, in order to move towards a nonviolent and sustainable future. Is a Gandhi-informed Swaraj technology, valuable but humanly limited, possible? What would a Gandhian world - a more egalitarian, interconnected, decentralized - of globalization look like? Focusing on key themes in Gandhi s thinking such as violence and nonviolence, absolute truth and relative truth, ethical and spiritual living, and his critique of modernity, the book compels us to rethink our positions today.