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people withot history Indias muslim ghettos

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people withot history Indias muslim ghettos

people withot history Indias muslim ghettos

Author: Jeremy Seabrook & Imran Ahmed Siddiqui
• Publisher: Navayana
• Language: English
• Published Year: 2011
• Pages: 257
• Dimensions: 19 x 13 cm
• Binding: Paperback
• ISBN: 9788189059446
• Book Condition: Used – Good
• Condition Note: Book is in good condition.
• Availability: In Stock

About the Book

People Without History: India’s Muslim Ghettos by Jeremy Seabrook and Imran Ahmed Siddiqui is a powerful and empathetic exploration of life within marginalized Muslim communities in Kolkata. Through detailed fieldwork, interviews, and narrative storytelling, the authors document the social, economic, and cultural realities faced by residents living in urban ghettos.

The book examines issues of poverty, exclusion, identity, and resilience while highlighting the historical and structural factors that shape everyday life in these communities. Combining journalistic sensitivity with sociological insight, the work provides a nuanced understanding of urban marginalization and social inequality in contemporary India.

Ideal for readers interested in sociology, urban studies, social justice, and modern Indian society, this volume offers an important and human-centered perspective on communities often overlooked in mainstream narratives.

$3.72
people withot history Indias muslim ghettos
$3.72

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Author: Jeremy Seabrook & Imran Ahmed Siddiqui
• Publisher: Navayana
• Language: English
• Published Year: 2011
• Pages: 257
• Dimensions: 19 x 13 cm
• Binding: Paperback
• ISBN: 9788189059446
• Book Condition: Used – Good
• Condition Note: Book is in good condition.
• Availability: In Stock

About the Book

People Without History: India’s Muslim Ghettos by Jeremy Seabrook and Imran Ahmed Siddiqui is a powerful and empathetic exploration of life within marginalized Muslim communities in Kolkata. Through detailed fieldwork, interviews, and narrative storytelling, the authors document the social, economic, and cultural realities faced by residents living in urban ghettos.

The book examines issues of poverty, exclusion, identity, and resilience while highlighting the historical and structural factors that shape everyday life in these communities. Combining journalistic sensitivity with sociological insight, the work provides a nuanced understanding of urban marginalization and social inequality in contemporary India.

Ideal for readers interested in sociology, urban studies, social justice, and modern Indian society, this volume offers an important and human-centered perspective on communities often overlooked in mainstream narratives.

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