Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/36390
Author(s): Lazzaretti, V.
Date: 2026
Title: The afterlives of repatriation: Heritage, emancipation and violence in Hindu nationalist India
Journal title: International Journal of Heritage Studies
Volume: 32
Number: 2
Pages: 189 - 214
Reference: Lazzaretti, V. (2026). The afterlives of repatriation: Heritage, emancipation and violence in Hindu nationalist India. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 32(2), 189-214. https://doi.org/10.1080/13527258.2025.2496881
ISSN: 1352-7258
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1080/13527258.2025.2496881
Keywords: Repatriation
Emancipation
Mukti
Kashi Vishvanath corridor
Annapurna
Gyanvapi mosque
Abstract: In 2021, a statuette of Hindu goddess Annapurna was taken from a Canadian museum to India as an arguably restorative, if not emancipatory, and decolonial achievement for a postcolonial nation. The statuette was enshrined at the Kashi Vishvanath temple in Banaras (Varanasi), a few metres from the Gyanvapi mosque – a longstanding target of Hindu nationalist campaigns for the mukti (liberation or emancipation) of supposedly originally Hindu sites. This article brings together Annapurna and the Gyanvapi mosque as two sides of the same story about heritage, emancipation and violence in Hindu nationalist India, and proposes an alternative methodological approach to the under-explored afterlives of repatriation. By combining longitudinal ethnographic research in the neighbourhood where Annapurna was enshrined with analysis of media and legal discourses, it teases out under-explored understandings that returned objects and repatriation itself afford in their post-repatriation locality – both in local responses and broader discussions around heritage restitution. I argue that repatriation cases such as that of Annapurna feed into a Hindu nationalist discursive ecology in which notions of emancipation, decolonisation and restitution are mobilised for majoritarian agendas: as exemplified by controversies around the Gyanvapi mosque, these notions increasingly underpin violent claims against minorities and their heritage.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Embargoed Access
Appears in Collections:CRIA-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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