Theatre of Conflict, City of Hope
Mumbai

1660 to Present Times

Price: 3500.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780198064381

Publication date:

06/01/2010

Hardback

312 pages

Price: 3500.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780198064381

Publication date:

06/01/2010

Hardback

312 pages

Mariam Dossal

Suitable for: Written by an acknowledged exp

Rights:  World Rights

Mariam Dossal

Description

A city of varied shades and home to millions, Mumbai stands tall among the most prominent cities of the world, an indelible landmark of hope, grit, and enterprise. The story of the evolution of this city from seven ‘islets’ to a megalopolis, is both fascinating and wrought with the scars of human agency. This is a tale of land scarcity, of the opening up of new spaces to settle, and the creation of many opportunities of growth. Theatre of Conflict, City of Hope is one of the most comprehensive accounts of this transformation. With contested space as its central concern, this encyclopaedic work maps Mumbai’s changing patterns of land use and its transition from an agrarian settlement of little significance to a world city. It traces how coconut gardens, rice fields, and fishing villages yielded to cotton mills, docks, and railways in the nineteenth century, and these more recently to shopping malls, skyscrapers, and urban slums. This volume brings to the fore the cosmopolitan character, diversity of cultures and interests, and the confluence of ideas in a grand city. Mariam Dossal deftly uses primary sources and hitherto inaccessible records to investigate the politics of land use, as feudal lands were converted into private property and customary rights were refigured into a capitalist land market. Her inquiry extends over four centuries and uses rare visuals and maps to illuminate the argument. Each chapter focuses on a specific period and emphasizes important changes which occurred in that phase of the city’s history. Narratives of both conflict and negotiated settlements between Mumbai’s inhabitants and the colonial and post-colonial state underline the discussions.

Mariam Dossal

Mariam Dossal

Mariam Dossal

Mariam Dossal

Description

A city of varied shades and home to millions, Mumbai stands tall among the most prominent cities of the world, an indelible landmark of hope, grit, and enterprise. The story of the evolution of this city from seven ‘islets’ to a megalopolis, is both fascinating and wrought with the scars of human agency. This is a tale of land scarcity, of the opening up of new spaces to settle, and the creation of many opportunities of growth. Theatre of Conflict, City of Hope is one of the most comprehensive accounts of this transformation. With contested space as its central concern, this encyclopaedic work maps Mumbai’s changing patterns of land use and its transition from an agrarian settlement of little significance to a world city. It traces how coconut gardens, rice fields, and fishing villages yielded to cotton mills, docks, and railways in the nineteenth century, and these more recently to shopping malls, skyscrapers, and urban slums. This volume brings to the fore the cosmopolitan character, diversity of cultures and interests, and the confluence of ideas in a grand city. Mariam Dossal deftly uses primary sources and hitherto inaccessible records to investigate the politics of land use, as feudal lands were converted into private property and customary rights were refigured into a capitalist land market. Her inquiry extends over four centuries and uses rare visuals and maps to illuminate the argument. Each chapter focuses on a specific period and emphasizes important changes which occurred in that phase of the city’s history. Narratives of both conflict and negotiated settlements between Mumbai’s inhabitants and the colonial and post-colonial state underline the discussions.

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