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Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad
#2
Here is another one:
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Chetan Bhatt BA PhD
Professor

E-mail c.bhatt@gold.ac.uk

Chetan Bhatt is on a three-year Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship, The Geosociology of Religious Violence, which started October 2005 and ends September 2008.

While on research leave, he will continue to supervise PhD students and welcomes new MPhil / PhD students, especially in areas related to transnational religious movements and networks, military studies and warfare theory, new processes of imperial sovereignty, and contemporary social and political theory / philosophy. His areas of current (2007) PhD (co-)supervision include: gender, secularism and the British state; new modes of Israeli state power and Zionism; international NGOs, governance and development; the transformations of political Islam; nationalism and aesthetics. Past areas of PhD (co-)supervision have included: Turkish nationalism, religion and the state; modernity, emergency and health policy; diverse families / sexualities; Trinidadian carnival; Indian cinema and the south Asian diaspora; new religious movements and ideologies in Euro-America; Kantian judgement, orientation and normativity; Romanticism and Orientalism.

He previously taught at the Department of Sociology at the University of Essex and the Department of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Southampton (the latter as an ESRC research fellow). His did his PhD (Politics and Sociology) at Birkbeck College, University of London and his BA Hons (Social and Political Sciences) at Sidney Sussex College, University of Cambridge.

Chetan Bhatt jointly coordinates the Department of Sociology's Xenos research initiative which focuses on new theoretical and empirical approaches to geosocial and geopolitical conflict, www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/xenos

Publications include:

Bhatt, C. (forthcoming 2008) ‘The Spirit lives on:  race and the disciplines’, in P. Hill-Collins & J. Solomos eds., The Handbook of Racial and Ethnic Studies (London & New York: Routledge).

Bhatt, C. (forthcoming 2008) ‘The times of movements:  a response to Judith Butler’, British Journal of Sociology, March.

Bhatt, C. (2007), ‘Frontlines and interstices in the global war on terror’, Development and Change, vol. 38, no. 6, November, pp. 1073-1093,

Bhatt, C. (2006) ‘The Fetish of the Margin: Religious Absolutism, Anti-Racism and Postcolonial Silence‘<link to: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/lwis...01/art00008>, in New Formations, Special Issue - Postcolonial Studies After Iraq, no.  59, Autumn, pp. 98-115,

Bhatt, C. (2005) ‘From the rivers of hate:  strange travels in Indo-German fantasy’ A. Schneider, A. Fitz, M. Kröger and D. Wenner eds. Atlas of Indo-German Fantasies, (Parthas: Berlin), ISBN: 3866019106,

Bhatt, C. (2004) ‘Contemporary geopolitics and alterity research’ in M. Bulmer & J. Solomos eds. Researching Race and Racism - Social Research Today Series (London: Routledge) ISBN: 0415300908

Bhatt, C. (2004) ‘ Majority ethnic claims and authoritarian nationalism’, in E. Kaufmann ed. Majority Groups and Dominant Minorities: Conceptualizing Dominant Ethnicity, (London:  Routledge). 


Bhatt, C. (2004) ‘Democracy and Hindu nationalism’, Democratization, Special Issue:  Religion, Democracy and Democratization,vol 11, no. 4, August 2004, pp. 133-154

(Also reprinted as: Bhatt, C. (2005) ‘Democracy and Hindu nationalism’ in J. Anderson ed. Religion, Democracy and Democratization, (London & New York:  Routledge), ISBN: 0415355370.)

Bhatt, C. (2004) ‘Doing a dissertation’ in C. Seale ed. Researching Society & Culture, Second Edition, (London:  Sage)

Bhatt, C. (2002) ‘The land, the blood and the passion: the Hindu far-right’ in J. Weeks, J. Holland & M. Waites eds. Sexualities and Society: a reader (Cambridge: Polity) ISBN: 0745622496 / 0745622488

Bhatt, C. (2001) Hindu Nationalism:  origins, ideologies and modern myths (Oxford, Berg/ New York, New York University Press). ISBN 1859733484 PB / 1859733433 HB, 232 pages.

Bhatt, C. (2001) ‘Kant’s raw man and the miming of primitivism:  Spivak’s Critique of Postcolonial Reason’ Radical Philosophy,  January, ISSN:  0300-211X, pp. 37-44

Bhatt, C. (2000) ‘Ethnic absolutism and the authoritarian spirit’ in V. Bell ed. Performativity and Belonging (London:  Sage), ISBN  076196522X HB / 0761965238 (PB)

Bhatt, C & Mukta, P eds. (2000) Hindutva in the West:  resurgent Hinduism and the politics of diaspora, Ethnic and Racial Studies Special Issue, 23:3, May, ISSN 0141-9870, pp. 401-616.

Bhatt, C. (2000) ‘Dharmo rakshati rakshitah:  Hindutva movements in the UK’, Ethnic & Racial Studies Special Issue, 23:3, May, ISSN  0141-9870, pp. 559-593.

Bhatt, C & Mukta, P. (2000) ‘Hindutva in the West:  mapping the antinomies of globalization’, Ethnic and Racial StudiesSpecial Issue, 23:3, May, ISSN 0141-9870, pp. 407-441.

Bhatt, C. (2000)  ‘Primordial Being:  Enlightenment, Schopenhauer and the Indian subject of postcolonial theory’, Radical Philosophy, April, ISSN 0300-211X, pp. 28-41. 

(Also reprinted as:  Bhatt, C. (2002) ‘Primordial Being’, in P. Osborne & S. Sandford eds. Philosophies of Race and Ethnicity (London: Continuum / Athlone) ISBN: 0826459935 / 0826459943, pp. 40-62)

Bhatt, C. (2000) ‘The lore of the homeland: Hindu nationalism and indigenist neoracism’ in J. Solomos & L. Back eds. Theories of Race and Racism: a reader (London: Routledge), ISBN 0415156718 HB / 0415156726 PB.

Bhatt, C. (1999) ‘Ethnic absolutism and the authoritarian spirit’, Theory, Culture and Society Special Issue 16:2, April, ISSN 0263-2764, pp. 65-85.

Bhatt, C. & R. Lee. (1997) ‘Official knowledges, the free market and identity formation’ in J. Oppenheimer & H. Rickett eds. Acting on AIDS (London:  Serpent’s Tail), ISBN 1852425539.

Bhatt, C. (1997) Liberation & Purity: race, new religious movements and the ethics of postmodernity (London & Bristol, Penn, Taylor & Francis/UCL Press) ISBN 1857284240 PB / 1857284232 HB, 306 pages.

Bhatt, C. (1994) ‘New Foundations:  contingency, indeterminacy and black translocality’ in J. Weeks ed. The Lesser Evil & the Greater Good:  the theory and politics of social diversity, (London:  River’s Oram) ISBN 185489055, pp. 138-164.

Policy-related publications include:

C. Bhatt (2003) Promoting Race Equality in the English NHS, Commission for Racial Equality, April, 50 pages.

Bhatt, C., Phellas, C. & Pozniak, A. (2000) National African HIV Prevention Projects, Evaluation Report to the Department of Health / EHHA, (London:  Goldsmiths College/Enfield & Haringey Health Authority) ISBN 0902986635,  84 pages.

Bhatt, C. (1997) Positive Responses: HIV and African communities in Enfield & Haringey (London: Enfield & Haringey Health Authority), 93 pages

Bhatt, C. (1996) Looking at Epidemiology (vol. 1) (London: The HIV Project) ISBN 1899240209, 40 pages.

Bhatt, C. (1996) HIV Primary and Secondary Prevention issues in African communities (vol. 2) (London: The HIV Project) ISBN 189924025X, 52 pages.

Bhatt, C. (1996) Needs Assessment (vol. 3) (London: The HIV Project) ISBN I899240306, 46 pages.

Bhatt, C. (1992) ‘Empowerment and Understanding’, in S. Sandberg et al eds. Working Where the Risks Are (London:  Health Education Authority) ISBN 1854484214

http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/sociology/staff/bhatt.php<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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Messages In This Thread
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Bharatvarsh - 04-10-2008, 04:53 PM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Shambhu - 04-26-2008, 03:45 PM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Husky - 04-28-2008, 09:47 AM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by ramana - 05-23-2008, 06:33 PM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Guest - 08-22-2008, 08:57 PM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Guest - 09-18-2008, 05:16 PM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Shambhu - 09-18-2008, 06:22 PM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Guest - 11-15-2008, 01:08 AM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Bodhi - 11-15-2008, 04:16 AM
Indian Commies And Leftists Abroad - by Bodhi - 11-15-2008, 05:39 PM

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