Contemporary South Asia Podcast

Dr Thomas Chambers & Guests

The Contemporary South Asia podcast extends the mission of the journal by providing a forum for critical engagement with the social, political, economic, and cultural transformations shaping the region today. Drawing on cutting-edge scholarship published in the journal, each episode features conversations with researchers, practitioners, and commentators whose work illuminates the complexities of South Asian societies within global and historical contexts. Topics range from state formation, migration, and development to gender, environment, and cultural production. Through these dialogues, the series fosters interdisciplinary reflection and a deeper understanding of the forces redefining South Asia and its diasporas in the contemporary world. To view the articles discussed in full, please see our website: https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/ccsa20 Any queries can be directed to editorialoffice@csajournal.net

Episodes

  1. Dr Chandan Bose - Sustaining craft markets in urban India: a case study of Shilparamam, Hyderabad

    Apr 28

    Dr Chandan Bose - Sustaining craft markets in urban India: a case study of Shilparamam, Hyderabad

    This episode explores the intersections of migration, labour, and aspiration within the urban handicraft economy of contemporary India through an ethnographic study of Shilparamam, an artisanal market in Hyderabad. Focusing on biographical narratives of artisans, shopkeepers, and their assistants who have migrated from regions such as Mithila (Bihar), Mednipur (West Bengal), Manikpatna (Odisha), and Agra (Uttar Pradesh), Chandan examines how urban markets mediate relationships between local economies and craft production. It privileges the site of distribution over production to understand how artisans position themselves within the infrastructures and affective landscapes of the city. The analysis unfolds in three parts: first, it introduces the concept of “surrogate migration,” where objects and kinship-based networks substitute for physical mobility; second, it discusses how artisans draw upon artisanal and familial histories to frame themselves as agents of regional development and community leadership; and third, it considers how Shilparamam becomes a space of aspiration and temporary mobility for youth entering the craft sector. By attending to the affective and relational dimensions of craft labour, Chandan contributes to broader discussions on urban informality, artisanal subjectivity, and the reconfiguration of rural-urban ties in India's contemporary craft economies. keywords: Urban handicraft markets, Migrant artisans, Surrogate migration, Hyderabad, craft production.

    1 hr
  2. Dr Mudassar Munir - The state through intermediaries: Dhara Bandi, mediation,and the politics of survival in Punjab, Pakistan

    Mar 26

    Dr Mudassar Munir - The state through intermediaries: Dhara Bandi, mediation,and the politics of survival in Punjab, Pakistan

    Across rural Punjab, formal state institutions are often experienced as distant, opaque, and unreliable. In this context, intermediaries occupy central roles in the everyday political and social life of villages. This article examines how their authority is built and sustained through dhara bandi (a Punjabi term for factional loyalty and social-political alliances, maintained through everyday acts of mediation, presence, and performance). Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Bhi Nagar, a pseudonym for a central Punjab village, I show how intermediaries’ practices – hosting gatherings in baithaks, mediating disputes, navigating bureaucracies, and cultivating digital visibility – both bind villagers in durable networks of allegiance and render the state locally intelligible. These actors are not merely brokers who facilitate access to resources; their performative labour enacts authority, sustains factional cohesion, and materializes the state in everyday life. By linking local practices of factionalism to the symbolic authority of national leaders, intermediaries also translate national charisma into tangible forms of engagement that reinforce the perception of state responsiveness. This analysis situates intermediaries at the heart of rural governance in Punjab, contributing to broader debates on hybrid governance, the endurance of weak states, and the everyday production of political order.

    56 min
  3. Dr Bharti Arora - Decolonial praxis/es of solidarity in Indian literary and cultural discourses on social movements

    10/27/2025

    Dr Bharti Arora - Decolonial praxis/es of solidarity in Indian literary and cultural discourses on social movements

    Interview with Bharti Arora, an Assistant Professor of English at the Department of English, University of Delhi. Special Section titled: Decolonial praxis/es of solidarity in Indian literary and cultural discourses on social movements For the full journal issue, see: https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ccsa20/33/1 Summary The special section probes how Indian literary and cultural discourses represent the making, unmaking, and remaking(s) of solidarity among citizen subjects, who agitate for their rights vis-à-vis hegemonic discourses of the nation-state. Such an exploration becomes significant to challenge what Mignolo (2018) calls ‘the colonial matrix of power’ (141),and the ways in which this matrix creates and enforces a regime of domination, management and control of South Asian states and their indigenous resources. The biggest challenge that confronts decolonised states is the reconstitution of ‘epistemological decolonization, as decoloniality to clear the way for new intercultural communication, for an interchange of experiences and meaning, as the basis of another relationality in opposition to the universalist projections of the western civilization’ (Mignolo 2021, 4). Werbner and Davis (2005), like Mignolo (2021) have cautioned against the idea of the nation-state, which is based on the hegemony of a particular group/community over all others, where the ideological apparatuses of civil society and state are controlled by a particular community. This vision comes closer to deploying exclusionary tactics of racism, which constructs ‘minorities into assumed deviants from the normal’ (Yuval-Davis 1997, 11), and systemically excludes them from accessing resources of the state.

    48 min

About

The Contemporary South Asia podcast extends the mission of the journal by providing a forum for critical engagement with the social, political, economic, and cultural transformations shaping the region today. Drawing on cutting-edge scholarship published in the journal, each episode features conversations with researchers, practitioners, and commentators whose work illuminates the complexities of South Asian societies within global and historical contexts. Topics range from state formation, migration, and development to gender, environment, and cultural production. Through these dialogues, the series fosters interdisciplinary reflection and a deeper understanding of the forces redefining South Asia and its diasporas in the contemporary world. To view the articles discussed in full, please see our website: https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/ccsa20 Any queries can be directed to editorialoffice@csajournal.net