566
Views
10
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Love Actually: Youth Mediators and Advisors in North India

Pages 974-988 | Received 01 Jan 2017, Accepted 01 Aug 2017, Published online: 18 Jan 2018

References

  • Abraham, L. 2002. Bhai-behen, true love, time pass: Friendships and sexual partnerships among youth in an Indian metropolis. Culture, Health & Sexuality 4 (3):337–53.
  • Ahearn, L. M. 2001. Invitations to love: Literacy, love letters and social change in Nepal. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  • Ahmed, S. 2004. Affective economies. Social Text 22 (2): 117–39.
  • Ansell, N. 2016. Children, youth and development. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Arnot, M. 2009. A global conscience collective? Incorporating gender injustices into global citizenship education. Education, Citizenship and Social Justice 4:117–32.
  • Baas, M. 2007. “Arranged love”: Marriage in a transnational work environment. International Institute for Asian Studies Newsletter 45:9.
  • Bacchetta, P. 2004. Gender in the Hindu nation: RSS women as ideologues (Vol. 1). New Delhi, India: Women Unlimited.
  • Bayat, A. 2013. Life as politics: How ordinary people change the Middle East. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Berlant, L. 1998. Intimacy: A special issue. Critical Inquiry 24 (2):281–88.
  • Berreman, G. D. 1963. Hindus of the Himalayas. Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Chowdhry, P. 2004. Caste panchayats and the policing of marriage in Haryana: Enforcing kinship and territorial exogamy. Contributions to Indian Sociology 38 (1–2):1–42.
  • ———. 2007. Contentious marriages, eloping couples: Gender, caste, and patriarchy in northern India. Delhi, India: Oxford University Press.
  • Cole, J., and L. M. Thomas. 2009. Thinking through love in Africa. In Love in Africa, ed. J. Cole and L. M. Thomas, 1–30. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Das, V. 1995. Critical events. Delhi, India: Oxford University Press.
  • ———. 2008. Violence, gender, and subjectivity. Annual Review of Anthropology 37:283–99.
  • Dave, N. N. 2011. Indian and lesbian and what came next: Affect, commensuration, and queer emergences. American Ethnologist 38 (4):650–65.
  • Donner, H. 2002. One's own marriage: Love marriages in a Calcutta neighbourhood. South Asia Research 22 (1): 79–94.
  • Doron, A., and R. Jeffery. 2013. The great Indian phone book. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Durham, D. 2008. Apathy and agency: The romance of agency and youth in Botswana. In Figuring the future: Globalization and the temporalities of children and youth, ed. D. Durham and J. Cole, 151–78. Santa Fe, NM: SAR.
  • Dwyer, R. 2000. All you want is money, all you need is love: Sexuality and romance in modern India. London: Cassell.
  • Dyson, J. 2008. Harvesting identities: Youth, work and gender in the Indian Himalayas. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 98:160–79.
  • ———. 2010. Friendship in practice: Girls' work in the Indian Himalayas. American Ethnologist 37:472–98.
  • ———. 2014. Working childhoods: Youth, agency and the environment in India. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Edelman, L. 2004. No future: Queer theory and the death drive. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  • Fuller, C. J., and H. Narasimhan. 2008. Companionate marriage in India: The changing marriage system in a middle-class Brahman subcaste. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 14 (4):736–54.
  • Geoghegan, H., and A. Hess. 2015. Object-love at the science museum: Cultural geographies of museum storerooms. Cultural Geographies 22 (3):445–65.
  • Gidwani, V. K., and K. Sivaramakrishnan. 2006. Subaltern cosmopolitanism as politics. Antipode 38 (1):7–21.
  • ———. 2009. Lived experiences: Marriage, notions of love, and kinship support amongst poor women in Delhi. Contributions to Indian Sociology 43 (1):1–33.
  • Grover, S. 2011. Marriage, love, caste, and kinship support: Lived experiences of the urban poor in India. Delhi, India: Social Science Press.
  • Gupta, C. 2009. Hindu women, Muslim men: Love Jihad and conversions. Economic and Political Weekly XLIV (51):13–15.
  • Hansen, T. B. 1996. Recuperating masculinity: Hindu nationalism, violence and the exorcism of the Muslim “other.” Critique of Anthropology 16 (2):137–72.
  • Hopkins, P. E. 2007. Young people, masculinities, religion and race: New social geographies. Progress in Human Geography 31 (2):163–77.
  • Hunter, M. 2010. Love in the time of AIDS: Inequality, gender, and rights in South Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  • Illouz, E. 1997. Consuming the romantic utopia: Love and the cultural contradictions of capitalism. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Jeffrey, C. 2010. Timepass: Youth, class and the politics of waiting. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Jeffrey, C., and J. Dyson. 2014. Generative politics: Youth and the state in India. Comparative Studies in Society and History 56 (4):967–94.
  • Jeffrey, C., P. Jeffery, and R. Jeffery. 2008. Degrees without freedom? Education, masculinities, and unemployment in north India. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Jeffrey, C., and C. McFarlane. 2008. Performing cosmopolitanism. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 26 (3):420–27.
  • Jones, J. L. 2010. “Nothing is straight in Zimbabwe”: The rise of the kukiya-kiya economy 2000–2008. Journal of Southern African Studies 36 (2):285–99.
  • Kamat, S. 2002. Development hegemony: NGOs and the state in India. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  • Kaur, R. 2010. Khap panchayats, sex ratio and female agency. Economic and Political Weekly 45 (23):14–16.
  • Klenk, R. 2010. Educating activists: Development and gender in the making of modern Gandhians. Bloomington, IN: Lexington Books.
  • Krishna, A. 2002. Active social capital: Tracing the roots of development and democracy. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Lawson, V. 2007. Geographies of care and responsibility. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 97 (1):1–11.
  • Mains, D. 2012. Hope is cut: Youth, unemployment, and the future in urban Ethiopia. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  • Majumdar, R. 2009. Marriage and modernity: Family values in colonial Bengal. Delhi, India: Oxford University Press.
  • Mayer, T., ed. 2012. Gender ironies of nationalism: Sexing the nation. London and New York: Routledge.
  • Mody, P. 2002. Love and the law: Love-marriage in Delhi. Modern Asian Studies 36 (1):223–56.
  • Morrison, C. A., L. Johnston, and R. Longhurst. 2013. Critical geographies of love as spatial, relational and political. Progress in Human Geography 37 (4):505–21.
  • Naafs, S., and B. White. 2012. Intermediate generations: Reflections on Indonesian youth studies. The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology 13:3–20.
  • Nagar, R. 2006. Playing with fire: Feminist thought and activism through seven lives in India. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Nast, H. J. 2006. Loving … whatever: Alienation, neoliberalism and pet-love in the twenty-first century. ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies 5 (2): 300–27.
  • Newell, S. 2012. The modernity bluff: Crime, consumption, and citizenship in Côte d'Ivoire. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Office of the Registrar General (ORG). 2011. Census of India. New Delhi: Government of India.
  • Orsini, F., ed. 2006. Love in South Asia: A cultural history. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Oza, R. 2001. Showcasing India: Gender, geography, and globalization. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 26 (4):1067–95.
  • Parry, J. 2001. Ankalu's errant wife: Sex, marriage and industry in contemporary Chhattisgarh. Modern Asian Studies 35 (4):783–820.
  • Pratt, G. 2012. Families apart: Migrant mothers and the conflicts of labor and love. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Rao, M. 2011. Love Jihad and demographic fears. Indian Journal of Gender Studies 18 (3):425–30.
  • Rasool, S. 2013. Re-constructing discourses of love to facilitate help-seeking after woman abuse. Agenda 27 (2): 56–64.
  • Rogers, M. 2008. Modernity, “authenticity,” and ambivalence: Subaltern masculinities on a south Indian college campus. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 14 (1):79–95.
  • Smith, S. H. 2009. The domestication of geopolitics: Buddhist-Muslim conflict and the policing of marriage and the body in Ladakh, India. Geopolitics 14 (2):197–218.
  • ———. 2011. She says herself, “I have no future”': Love, fate and territory in Leh District, India. Gender, Place and Culture 18 (4):455–76.
  • ———. 2012. Intimate geopolitics: Religion, marriage, and reproductive bodies in Leh, Ladakh. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 102 (6):1511–28.
  • Stambach, A. 1998. “Too much studying makes me crazy”: School-related illnesses on Mount Kilimanjaro. Comparative Education Review 42 (4):497–512.
  • Thieme, T. 2010. Youth, waste and work in Mathare: Whose business and whose politics? Environment and Urbanization 22 (2):333–52.
  • Trawick, M. 1990. Notes on love in a Tamil family. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Uberoi, P. 2009. Freedom and destiny: Gender, family, and popular culture in India. Delhi, India: Oxford University Press.
  • Wylie, J. 2009. Landscape, absence and the geographies of love. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 34 (3):275–89.
  • Young, S., and C. Jeffrey. 2012. Making ends meet. Economic & Political Weekly 47 (30):45–51.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.