Freedom Unfinished: Fundamentalism and Popular Resistance in Bangladesh Today

Freedom Unfinished: Fundamentalism and Popular Resistance in Bangladesh Today

by JeremySeabrook (Author)

Synopsis

This book takes its readers on a voyage of discovery. Here is modern Bangladesh: the life of its villages, its farms and fields, its city slums and elites, its waterways, its cultural heritage and the diversity of Bengali tradition all threatened by the emergence of a less tolerant version of Islam. Day labourers and rickshaw drivers, maidservants and prostitutes, child labourers and garment workers, landlords and politicians, criminals and students, all engage us in their lives. We range through the watery landscapes of Barisal to the plains of North Bengal and the hills of Chittagong. We visit the strongholds of fundamentalism. And we also meet women fighting for education, as well as idealists and freedom fighters. The author shows how political struggle has now turned into a desperate battle for the spirit of Bengal, which has become a battleground between the liberal humanism of a rooted Bengali culture and the disciplined austerities of Islam. The tension between the contending forces gives this book a powerful resonance that goes far beyond the specifics of Bangladesh to wherever there is conflict between traditional cultures and the forces of globalism.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Publisher: Zed Books Ltd
Published: 01 Jan 2002

ISBN 10: 1856499081
ISBN 13: 9781856499088

Media Reviews
'Jeremy Seabrook's book is a beautifully written account of the complex struggles over livelihood, identity and politics in Bangladesh. Through interviews with people across the country he vividly captures their hopes, fears, sorrows and spirit and brings alive the story of Bangladesh -- the dream of the liberation war, the post-liberation cycle of frustrations and renewals, the emergence of a wealthy new elite, a leadership devoid of ideology, and the continuing battle between fundamentalist and secular forces over the interpretation of religion and culture. The nuanced description of individual dilemmas and perspectives in Bangladesh in the larger context of globalization makes this study a timely and valuable contribution to the current debates on globalization and development.' - Rounaq Jahan, Professor, Columbia University, New York 'Recently, research on Bangladeshi culture and politics has focused on the religious division between modernists and traditionalists...Jeremy Seabrook has highlighted this aspect with a different methodology. It is a story from quiet villagers, thoughtful writers, and active political mobilizers. At the same time, it is a history of Bangladeshi liberation, its growth and development, and cultural expression...The book is good for general readers, journalists, and scholars interested in South Asian development.' - Journal of Third World Studies, Fall 2005 'The author eminently and lucidly projects secular culture ... the book's readability is an asset.' - Journal of Third World Studies
Author Bio
Former teacher, social worker and lecturer, Jeremy Seabrook has worked as a writer and journalist for 25 years, both in the UK and India. He has written plays and features for the theatre, TV and radio. He has also written widely on development issues, especially migration and urbanization in the South. He has worked closely with a number of non-government organizations in South and South East Asia, including the Consumers' Association of Penang, Arban and Proshika in Bangladesh. He currently contributes to New Internationalist, Race and Class, The Ecologist, and he writes regularly for Third World Network in Malaysia. His recent books include: Freedom Unfinished: Fundamentalism and Popular Resistance in Bangladesh Today (Zed Books) The Myth of the Market (Green Books) Travels in the Skin Trade (Pluto Press) Notes from Another India (Pluto Press) Victims of Development (Verso) In the Cities of the South (Verso) Colonies of the Heart (a novel) (GMP).