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In her powerful, poignant book—one of the best non-fiction works from India in recent years—Anubha Bhonsle examines the tangled and tragic history of Manipur, and of much of India’s North East. Through the story of Irom Sharmila—on a protest fast since 2000—and many others who have fallen victim to violence or despair or stood up to fight for peace and justice, she shows us an entire society ravaged by insurgency and counter-insurgency operations, corruption and ethnic rivalries. Drawing upon extensive interviews with personnel of the Indian army and intelligence agencies, politicians and bureaucrats, leaders of insurgent groups, Irom Sharmila and her family and ordinary people across Manipur, Anubha Bhonsle has produced a compelling and necessary book on the North East, the Indian state, identity politics and the enormous human cost of conflict.
280 pages, Kindle Edition
Published January 12, 2016
"The land beyond the Chicken's Neck remains trapped in time. The insurgents continue to battle Indian security forces for independence, but over nearly seventy years many have settled for extensive autonomy or the promise of dialogue, or even simply a safe house. Everything is in a state of violent, tragic flux. The cartographers' terra incognita has been replaced with a map. Borders and boundaries are both savage and tender. The topography holds within its perimeter lush green fields and machine gun nests. It is a map dotted with ethnic rebel armies fighting the Indian state but also each other over conflicting homeland demands and scarce resources. A map where little tinpot groups survive on a stipend and hold revolutionary rehearsals. A map where the Indian intelligence agencies play divide and rule in the name of integration. A map where the state's writ barely runs and it is almost always twilight."