Abstract
In the early years of mass nationalism in colonial South Asia, Mohandas Gandhi inaugurated aswadeshi(indigenous goods) movement, which aimed to achieveswaraj, or “home rule,” by establishing India's economic self-sufficiency from Britain. Invoking an earlier movement of the same name, Gandhi created a new form of swadeshi politics that encouraged the production and exclusive consumption of hand-spun, hand-woven cloth calledkhadi. The campaign to popularize this movement took many forms, including the organization of exhibitions that demonstrated cloth production and sold khadi goods. On the occasion of one such exhibition in 1927, Gandhi explained the significance of exhibitions for the movement:[The exhibition] is designed to be really a study for those who want to understand what thiskhadimovement stands for, and what it has been able to do. It is not a mere ocular demonstration to be dismissed out of our minds immediately. … It is not a cinema. It is actually a nursery where a student, a lover of humanity, a lover of his own country may come and see things for himself.(“The Exhibition,”Young India, 14 July 1927)
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference73 articles.
1. Women and Gandhi;Kishwar;Economic and Political Weekly,1985
Cited by
44 articles.
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