

| Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
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BOOKs
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. | General Stacks | 378.954 BHA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | PB | Available | Recommended by Dr. Manpreet Singh Dhillon | 40333 |
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| 378.1664 ACT - 2 The official ACT reding guide / | 378.198209 GUI The Tyranny of the Meritocracy : | 378.54 JAL Building Research Universities in India | 378.954 BHA The Indian university: A critical history / | 378.954 YER Internationalization of higher education in India / | 379.11 ANS From the ballot to the blackboard : The redistributive political economy of education | 379.158 TAM Common core : |
Acknowledgements -
Introduction: What is the ‘Indian’ University? -
PART ONE: Stories of a Making:
Chapter One: The Great Ancient Indian Universities: History or Myth? -
Chapter Two: The Long Nineteenth Century: Caste and Collegiate Life in Colonial India -
Chapter Three: Pre-Independence Youth Movements (1905–47): The Force of Religion and the Making of a Nationalist Student Subject -
PART TWO: Histories of a Re-/Un-making:
Chapter Four: Post-Independence University Planning (1947–86): The Ideology of Welfare -
Chapter Five: Reaping Dividends on Discrimination: The Neoliberal ‘Turn’ to the Market (1986–2012) -
Chapter Six: Towards NEP 2020: The Age of the Platform University? -
Conclusion: The Return to ‘Publicness’: A History for the University’s Futures -
Index.
Is there such a thing as an ‘Indian university’? Is there an ‘idea’ of an Indian university? Were universities in India living and breathing products of the soil, or were they conceptual imports from a colonial heritage? What is the relationship between universities in India and the ‘publics’ that have inhabited or are alienated by them? More pointedly, how ‘public’ is the Indian public university?
This volume explores the historical makings of the Indian university as it stands today, by sifting through archives, colonial/postcolonial policies, textual-literary records and political-economic developments. What results is a ‘critical history’ – navigating the force of myth and promise, revolutions and reforms, communities and markets. From the glorification of ancient ‘greatness’ to the riskiness of ‘platform futures’, this book offers a time travel through one of the most exalted and yet most abused institutions of our age – the university.