Cover of Radical Equality by Aishwary Kumar
Radical Equality
Ambedkar, Gandhi, and the Risk of Democracy
Aishwary Kumar

BUY THIS BOOK

June 2015
416 pages.
$65.00

Cloth ISBN: 9780804791953
Digital ISBN: 9780804794268
(20% off e-book after you add to Shopping Cart.
Rental options also available.)

Request Review/Desk/Examination Copy

CITE THIS BOOK

DescriptionDesc.
Reviews
Excerpts and More

B.R. Ambedkar, the architect of India's constitution, and M.K. Gandhi, the Indian nationalist, two figures whose thought and legacies have most strongly shaped the contours of Indian democracy, are typically considered antagonists who held irreconcilable views on empire, politics, and society. As such, they are rarely studied together. This book reassesses their complex relationship, focusing on their shared commitment to equality and justice, which for them was inseparable from anticolonial struggles for sovereignty.

Both men inherited the concept of equality from Western humanism, but their ideas mark a radical turn in humanist conceptions of politics. This study recovers the philosophical foundations of their thought in Indian and Western traditions, religious and secular alike. Attending to moments of difficulty in their conceptions of justice and their language of nonviolence, it probes the nature of risk that radical democracy's desire for inclusion opens within modern political thought. In excavating Ambedkar and Gandhi's intellectual kinship, Radical Equality allows them to shed light on each other, even as it places them within a global constellation of moral and political visions. The story of their struggle against inequality, violence, and empire thus transcends national boundaries and unfolds within a universal history of citizenship and dissent.

About the author

Aishwary Kumar is Assistant Professor of History at Stanford University.

"A highly important and original contribution to the study of global intellectual history, Kumar's book convincingly shows that Gandhi and Ambedkar, as the most important nonwestern thinkers of the twentieth century, must be considered together in the making of modern political thought in South Asia and beyond. Beautifully written and carefully argued."

—Vinayak Chaturvedi, University of California, Irvine

"Kumar's patient and probing reading of the works of Gandhi and Ambedkar–developed against the established consensus in the literature and with an eye to questions of liberalism and democracy–adds a new and distinctive voice to a growing, exciting corpus on these two thinkers. This is a welcome development for both South Asian Studies and for the study of modern political thought globally considered."

—Dipesh Chakrabarty, The University of Chicago