Land, Guns, Caste, Woman

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The Memoir of a Lapsed Revolutionary

Gita Ramaswamy

  • Binding: Paperback
  • Number of Pages: 432
  • ISBN: 9788198067050
  • Size: 5.5 x 8.5”
Category:

The epic story of a revolution without a gun.

In her teens, Gita Ramaswamy escapes the brahminical clutches of her family that tried to cure her of Naxalism with shock treatment. She endures the horrors of the Emergency. She is disillusioned. But not without hope. In the 1980s, Gita starts living with agricultural labourers in Telangana. They are landless dalits, caught between a reddy and a hard place. They are in bondage, cheated out of land and all rights. They are in the mood to fight. Together, they take on the tyrannical landlords who brutalized the villages for generations.

Gita Ramaswamy is best known for her work with Hyderabad Book Trust that has published over four hundred titles since 1980. Gita has authored several books and has translated extensively from Telugu into English.

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In the media

Land, Guns, Caste, Woman is both an important book and a deeply pleasurable one’—Scroll

An excerpt from the book was published on Scroll.

‘Before Gita Ramaswamy told her story no other educated Brahmin woman, told us historical facts of Brahmin life’—Counter Currents

‘Gita Ramaswamy’s memoir eshews all formats and frameworks, it celebrates nuance and completely defies pigeonholing’—Business Standard

‘A book like no other … a fierce critique of what is wrong with the Indian Left, what ails the judiciary, and why the poor cannot get justice’—The Hindu

Beautiful … the personal and the political are intertwined tightly in Gita Ramaswamy’—The Wire

Remarkably clear-eyed. … A story of passion and compassion, of a full and considered life’—India Today

‘Riveting. Essential reading about the complexities of caste and gender relations that make up the intimate life of politics, citizenship, law and violence’—The India Forum

Ramaswamy used her privileges not just for the benefit of the underprivileged, but to rip out the accepted norm of extreme exploitation’—Frontline

Poignant, deeply moving. … A remarkable book’—Raiot

A compelling memoir. … A heady reminder to not give in to despair when confronted with seemingly intractable power’—Hindustan Times

A saga of relentless struggle against oppression: of caste, of family, and of feudal lords in Telangana’—The Federal

In Hindu‘s literary picks of the week. A feature in Mid-Day.

A conversation with Gita Ramaswamy in Maidaanam.

A report from the launch of the book at Ooty Literature Festival.

An interview with Aatika Singh on the movement and its implications, on TwoCircles.

 

An interview with Gita on Enquiry with Shoma Chaudhury:

Gita sits down for a conversation with Prof Chaman Lal, on his channel AmbedkarNaama:

The launch of the book in New Delhi at the Press Club, with Nandini Sundar

An interview on NewsClick:

A discussion of the book at the HLF

‘I read this book with awe, admiration and envy.’Naseeruddin Shah

‘No Indian woman’s story has ever been told like this.’
Kancha Ilaiah Shepherd

‘Can be is dangerous to your complacency.’—Jerry Pinto

‘A book like no other’—The Hindu

‘A nuanced account that defies pigeonholing.’—Business Standard

‘A story of passion and compassion.’—India Today

‘An important, deeply pleasurable work.’—Scroll