The desire for ‘Development’ — often defined vaguely, working
as a catch-all term for economic growth, social welfare, and socialistic
redistribution of resources— has been intimately linked to the
construction of the idea of a ‘Malayalee People’ as a distinct socio-cultural
entity in the post-independence period. In this paper, the effort is to
trace out some of these links in greater clarity. Put very briefly, the attempt
is to draw upon public sphere debates in Malayalee society in the
immediate post-independence decades, more specifically on speech and
writing accruing around the distinctiveness of Malayalee culture and
Aikya Keralam (United Kerala). Through this I hope to demonstrate the
centrality of Developmentalism in both the conception of a unified
‘Malayalee People’ and their relation with other similar entities as the
other States, and the Indian state. In the conclusion I try to reflect on
themes that could possibly take forward the research on Malayalee
identity in the late twentieth century and after.
Keywords: Developmentalism, (sub)nationality, United Kerala,
Malayalee identity
History
Publisher
Centre for Development Studies
Citation
Devika, J. (2007) 'A people united in development' : developmentalism in modern Malayalee identity. CDS working papers, no.386. Trivandrum: CDS.