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Capital: The Eruption of Delhi

Capital: The Eruption of Delhi Hardcover - 2014

by Dasgupta, Rana

  • Used
  • Fine
  • Hardcover
  • first

Description

New York: Penguin Press, 2014. xiii, 466 pages, maps; 24 cm. Tight, clean copy. Dust jacket protected in a mylar cover. A fine copy of the first printing. "In Capital, Commonwealth Prize-winning author Rana Dasgupta examines one of the great trends of our time: the expansion of the global elite. Capital is an intimate portrait of the city of Delhi which bears witness to the extraordinary transmogrification of India's capital. But it also offers a glimpse of what capitalism will become in the coming, post-Western world. The story of Delhi is a parable for where we are all headed. The boom following the opening up of India's economy plunged Delhi into a tumult of destruction and creation: slums and markets were ripped down, and shopping malls and apartment blocks erupted from the ruins. Many fortunes were made, and in the glassy stores nestled among the new highways, customers paid for global luxury with bags of cash. But the transformation was stern, abrupt and fantastically unequal, and it gave rise to strange and bewildering feelings. The city brimmed with ambition and rage. Violent crimes stole the headlines. In the style of V. S. Naipaul's now classic personal journeys, Dasgupta shows us this city through the eyes of its people. With the lyricism and empathy of a novelist, Dasgupta takes us through a series of encounters - with billionaires and bureaucrats, drug dealers and metal traders, slum dwellers and psychoanalysts - which plunge us into Delhi's intoxicating, and sometimes terrifying, story of capitalist transformation. Together these people comprise a generation on the cusp, like that of Gilded Age New York: who they are, and what they want, says a tremendous amount about what the world will look like in the rest of the twenty-first century. Interweaving over a century of history with his personal journey, Dasgupta presents us with the first literary portrait of one of the twenty-first century's fastest-growing megalopolises - a dark and uncanny portrait that gives us insights, too, as to the nature of our own - everyone's - shared, global future. " - Publisher.. 1st. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. 8vo. Collectible.
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Details

  • Title Capital: The Eruption of Delhi
  • Author Dasgupta, Rana
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition 1st
  • Condition Used - Fine
  • Pages 466
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Penguin Press, New York
  • Date 2014
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 099515
  • ISBN 9781594204470 / 1594204470
  • Weight 1.55 lbs (0.70 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.1 x 5.8 x 1.6 in (23.11 x 14.73 x 4.06 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Delhi (India) - Social conditions, Delhi (India) - Economic conditions
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2014005338
  • Dewey Decimal Code 330.954

Summary

A portrait of Delhi and its new elites—and a story of global capitalism unbound

Commonwealth Prize–winning author Rana Dasgupta examines one of the most important trends of our time: the growth of the global elite. Since the economic liberalization of 1991, wealth has poured into India, and especially into Delhi. Capital bears witness to the extraordinary transmogrification of India’s capital city, charting its emergence from a rural backwater to the center of the new Indian middle class. No other city on earth better embodies the breakneck, radically disruptive nature of the global economy’s growth over the past twenty years.

India has not become a new America, though. It more closely resembles post–Soviet Russia with its culture of tremendous excess and undercurrents of gangsterism. But more than anything else, India’s capital, Delhi, is an avatar for capitalism unbound. Capital is an intimate portrait of this very distinct place as well as a parable for where we are all headed.

In the style of V. S. Naipaul’s now classic personal journeys, Dasgupta travels through Delhi to meet with extraordinary characters who mostly hail from what Indians call the new Indian middle class, but they are the elites, by any measure. We first meet Rakesh, a young man from a north Indian merchant family whose business has increased in value by billions of dollars in recent years. As Dasgupta interviews him by his mammoth glass home perched beside pools built for a Delhi sultan centuries before, the nightly party of the new Indian middle class begins. To return home, Dasgupta must cross the city, where crowds of Delhi’s workers, migrants from the countryside, sleep on pavements. The contrast is astonishing. 

In a series of extraordinary meetings that reveals the attitudes, lives, hopes, and dreams of this new class, Dasgupta meets with a fashion designer, a tech entrepreneur, a young CEO, a woman who has devoted her life to helping Delhi’s forgotten poor—and many others. Together they comprise a generation on the cusp, like that of fin-de-siècle Paris, and who they are says a tremendous amount about what the world will look like in the twenty-first century.

From the publisher

Rana Dasgupta is the author of Solo, which won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, and Tokyo Cancelled, which was short-listed for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. Capital follows on from his Granta article, “Capital Gains,” which was chosen for McSweeney’s Best American Nonrequired Reading.

Categories

Media reviews

Salman Rushdie:
“Rana Dasgupta [is] the most unexpected and original Indian writer of his generation”

James Wood, The New Yorker:
“[Dasgupta is] graced with an ironic eye and a gift for sentences of lancing power and beauty.”

About the author

Rana Dasguptawon the 2010 Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best Book for his debut novelSolo. He is also the author of a collection of urban folktales, Tokyo Cancelled, which was shortlisted for the 2005 John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. Capitalis his first work of non-fiction. Born in Canterbury in 1971, he now lives in Delhi."