000 01620nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c6830
_d6830
005 20220209222304.0
008 200202s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a706906586
082 _a307.7 ISH
100 _aIshwaran, K
245 0 _aPopulistic community and modernization in India
260 _aDelhi
260 _bVikas
260 _c1978
300 _a122p.
520 _aTwo general concepts, Westernization and modernization, have been generally used to characterize the social changes that have been taking place in India since the beginning of the century. Before a profitable analysis of such changes or the processes that underlie such changes can be attempted, however, a preliminary theoretical issue needs to be re examined; namely the conceptualization of the rural communities, the most important foci of these changes. While substantial empirical information about these societies has accumulated, theoretical literature has yet to come to grips with the nature of these communities as a sociological category in order to do away with such loose concepts as the "peasant community," "village society," "traditional system" and "Little Tradition." This study, on the basis of data about a south Indian village community, conceptualizes India's rural communities as populistic communities, elaborates what constitutes a populistic community for purposes of this study, and then establishes a theoretical linkage between the populistic community and the modernization process in order to specify the concept of "populistic moderdization,"
650 _aCommunity development
942 _cB
_2ddc