In Africa in the Indian Imagination Antoinette Burton reframes our understanding of the postcolonial Afro-Asian solidarity that emerged from the 1955 Bandung conference. Afro-Asian solidarity is best understood, Burton contends, by using friction as a lens to expose the racial, class, gender, sexuality, caste, and political tensions throughout the postcolonial global South. Focusing on India's imagined relationship with Africa, Burton historicizes Africa's role in the emergence of a coherent postcolonial Indian identity. She shows how—despite Bandung's rhetoric of equality and brotherhood—Indian identity echoed colonial racial hierarchies in its subordination of Africans and blackness. Underscoring Indian anxiety over Africa and challenging the narratives and dearly held assumptions that presume a sentimentalized, nostalgic, and fraternal history of Afro-Asian solidarity, Burton demonstrates the continued need for anti-heroic, vexed, and fractious postcolonial critique.
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Citing/Siting Africa in the Indian Postcolonial Imagination
- Chapter 1: “Every Secret Thing”? Racial Politics in Ansuyah R. Singh’s: Behold the Earth Mourns (1960)
- Chapter 2: Race and the Politics of Position: Above and Below in Frank Moraes’: The Importance of Being Black (1965)
- Chapter 3: Fictions of Postcolonial Development: Race, Intimacy and Afro-Asian Solidarity in Chanakya Sen’s: The Morning After (1973)
- Chapter 4: Hands and Feet: Phyllis Naidoo’s Impressions of Anti-apartheid History (2002–2006)
- Epilogue
- Index