Conservative Public History in India
Data
2025Autore
Sharma, Shalini <Senior Lecturer in South Asian
History, Keele University, Newcastle-under-Lyme, England>
Metadata
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This article explores the conservative turn in India’s public history, examining its shift from a pluralistic,
regionally grounded tradition to a centralized, ideologically
driven narrative under the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Since 2014, public history has been increasingly reframed
through the lens of Hindutva nationalism, marginalizing
minority voices and emphasizing a singular Hindu civilizational past. This “saffronization” is reflected in curriculum
reforms, state-sponsored monuments, and the commercialization of heritage. Through examples such as the Ram
Mandir, the Kashi Vishwanath Corridor, and corporatesponsored heritage sites, the paper shows how historical
memory is being curated to support a narrow ideological
project. Despite this, pluralist initiatives persist at the community level, including grassroots archives, urban heritage
walks, and NGO-supported preservation efforts. These offer
critical counter-narratives and underscore the ongoing
contestation over India’s past. The paper argues that public
history in India has become a terrain of political struggle,
where historical representation is deeply entwined with
questions of democracy, identity, and power.
