• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Alyssa Ayres

author of Our Time Has Come

  • Home
  • About
  • Books
    • Our Time Has Come
    • Working With a Rising India
    • Speaking like a state
    • Power Realignments in Asia
    • India Briefing: Takeoff at Last?
    • India Briefing: Quickening The Pace of Change
  • Articles
  • Press
  • Appearances
  • Events
  • Contact

alyssa / August 1, 2008

“Language, the Nation, and Symbolic Capital: The Case of Punjab”

Journal of Asian Studies Vol. 67, No. 3 (August 2008): 917–946.

ABSTRACT

A movement to “revive the spirit of Punjab and Punjabi” in South Asia has enabled a surprising thaw between the two Punjabs of Pakistan and India. That this revival movement has been catalyzed from within Pakistan rather than India raises intriguing questions about language, nationalism, and the cultural basis of the nation-state. Although the Punjabiyat movement bears the surface features of a classical nationalist formation—insistence upon recovering an unfairly oppressed history and literature, one unique on earth and uniquely imbued with the spirit of the local people and the local land—its structural features differ markedly. Pakistan’s Punjab has long functioned as an ethnic hegemon, the center against which other regions struggle in a search for power. Yet the Punjabiyat movement presents Punjab as an oppressed victim of Pakistan’s troubled search for national identity. This essay argues that a theory of symbolic capital best explains this otherwise peculiar inversion of perceived and actual power, and underscores culture’s critical role in the nation’s political imagination.
Article Page

Filed Under: Articles, Scholarly Articles

Footer

ONLINE

My CFR page 
Twitter: @AyresAlyssa
Instagram: @AyresAlyssa
LinkedIn: alyssaayres
Facebook: fb.me/ayresalyssa
Goodreads author page
Amazon author page

Asia Unbound
Forbes.com

About Alyssa

Alyssa Ayres is senior fellow for India, Pakistan, and South Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations, based in Washington, DC. She served most recently as deputy assistant secretary of state for South Asia during 2010 to 2013, covering all issues across a dynamic region of 1.3 billion people (India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Maldives, and Bhutan), and providing policy direction and support for four U.S. embassies and four consulates. Trained originally as a cultural historian, she has experience in the nonprofit, government, and private sectors, and has carried out research on both India and Pakistan…READ MORE

Alyssa is available for Speaking Engagements. Visit the Contact page for more information.

Copyright © 2025 · Digital Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in