Talk:Dilip Menon
Dilip Menon is Professor of International Relations at University of Witwatersrand[1] as of August 2023. He is also the Director, Centre for Indian Studies in Africa and Mellon Chair in Indian Studies. He claims his research interests to be World Literatures, Cultural History and Cultural Anthropology[2].
As per his bio, he has published no books, papers or research pertaining to Hindus, rights of Hindus, the impact or relationship between Islam and Hinduism / Hindutva, India or the Indian Government.
In 2021, he endorsed the "Dismantling Global Hindutva" conference and made the allegation
"the current government of India [in 2021] has instituted discriminatory policies including beef bans, restrictions on religious conversion and interfaith weddings, and the introduction of religious discrimination into India’s citizenship laws. The result has been a horrifying rise in religious and caste-based violence, including hate crimes, lynchings, and rapes directed against Muslims, non-conforming Dalits, Sikhs, Christians, adivasis and other dissident Hindus. Women of these communities are especially targeted. Meanwhile, the government has used every tool of harassment and intimidation to muzzle dissent. Dozens of student activists and human rights defenders are currently languishing in jail indefinitely without due process under repressive anti-terrorism laws."[3]
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- Menon, Dilip. Is hierarchy the same as inequality?. 2020. 10.4324/9780429282447-3.
- Menon, Dilip. Thinking about the global south: Affinity and knowledge. 2018. 10.1017/9781108231930.003.
- Menon, Dilip. A Prehistory of Violence? Revolution and Martyrs in the Making of a Political Tradition in Kerala: History, Practice, Politics. 2018. 10.4324/9781315226811-10.
- Menon, Dilip. An Eminent Victorian: Gandhi, Hind Swaraj and the Crisis of Liberal Democracy in the Nineteenth Century. History of the Present. 2017. 7. 33. 10.5406/historypresent.7.1.0033.
- Menon, Dilip. A Prehistory of Violence? Revolution and Martyrs in the Making of a Political Tradition in Kerala. South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies. 2016. 39. 1-16. 10.1080/00856401.2016.1195452.
- Menon, Dilip. Writing Indian History after Subaltern Studies. 2015.
- Menon, Dilip. Minding one's words. 48. 59-60. 2013.
- Menon, Dilip. Itinerant Territoriality: The Spaces and Times of Post-colonial History. 2012.
- Menon, Dilip. An Ordinary Country. The Journal of Asian Studies. 2010. 69. 10.1017/S002191181000207X.
- Menon, Dilip. Things Fall Apart: The Cinematic Rendition of Agrarian Landscape in South India. The Journal of Peasant Studies. 2005. 32. 304-334. 10.1080/03066150500094519.
- Menon, Dilip. Religion and Colonial Modernity: Rethinking Belief and Identity. Economic and Political Weekly. 2002. 37. 1662-1667. 10.2307/4412047.
- Menon, Dilip. Houses by the sea - State-formation experiments in Malabar, 1760-1800. Economic and political weekly. 1999. 34. 1995-2003.
- Menon, Dilip. Caste and colonial modernity: Reading Saraswativijayam. Studies in History. 1997. 13. 291-312. 10.1177/025764309701300205.
- Irschick, Eugene & Menon, Dilip. Caste, Nationalism and Communism in South India, Malabar, 1900-1948. Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 1994. 27. 373. 10.2307/205227.
- Menon, Dilip. The Moral Community of the Teyyattam: Popular Culture in Late Colonial Malabar. Studies in History.1993. 9. 187-217. 10.1177/025764309300900203.
- Menon, Dilip. Kerala: Development through Radical Reform. By Richard H. Franke and Barbara H. Chasin. Promilla & Co Publisher: New Delhi, 1992. Pp. viii, 122. Modern Asian Studies - MOD ASIAN STUD. 1993. 27. 10.1017/S0026749X00011641.
- Menon, Dilip. Becoming 'Hindu' and 'Muslim': Identity and Conflict in Malabar.Trivandrum: CDS. 1994.
References[edit]
- ↑ Dilip Menon University Profile accessed August 22, 2023
- ↑ Dilip Menon ResearchGate Profile accessed August 2022 2023
- ↑ "Letter of Support", Dismantling Global Hindutva Conference website, accessed August 7, 2022