An original and innovative examination of the complex processes of media and political communication in modern India, crossing boundaries between literary and textual criticism, political science and social anthropology. Dr Dhital explores political mobilisation , the operations of ‘subversive’ literature, and the transmission of ideas through ephemeral literary productions with incisiveness, imagination and insight. Her conclusions about language, state media policy, censorship and electoral law are strikingly relevant to current conditions as well as to colonial and post-colonial history. This is a notably impressive debut, subtly but decisively advancing the discussion of nationalism and identity in the ‘imagined communities’ of the modern world.