Dr Moyukh Chatterjee
Job Title
Lecturer in Social Anthropology

Room number
5.13Building (Address)
Chrystal Macmillan BuildingStreet (Address)
15a George SquareCity (Address)
EdinburghCountry (Address)
United KingdowmPost code (Address)
EH8 9LDResearch interests
Research interests
Political and legal anthropology; Political aesthetics; Political violence; Far-right; Authoritarianism and supremacist movements; Crowds, publics, and spectacles; India and South Asia.
Topics interested in supervising
I would be happy to discuss potential projects related to any of my research interests.
If you are interested in being supervised by me, please see the links below (open in new windows) for more information:
Background
I am a political and legal anthropologist and my work explores the relationship between law, violence and justice in the context of far-right politics.
Before coming to Edinburgh, I was a postdoctoral fellow in global governance at McGill University, Montreal and an Assistant Professor at the School of Policy and Governance at Azim Premji University in Bangalore, India. I finished my PhD in Anthropology at Emory University after my Master's and M.Phil in Sociology at the Delhi School of Economics and undergraduate studies in English Literature in Delhi University. In sum, I have studied and taught in universities in USA, Canada, India and now in Scotland.
My book Composing Violence: The Limits of Exposure and the Making of Minorities (Duke University Press, 2023) examines how political violence against minorities acts as a catalyst for radical changes in law, public culture, and statecraft. More broadly, my book explores new modes of writing and reading violence at a time of rising authoritarian politics and anti-minority violence in India and beyond.
Over the last decade, I have been trying to understand the relationship between crowds and power, impunity and state formation, and the law and supremacist regimes as part of a broader effort to grasp the role of violence within liberal democracies.
My current research examines the everyday life of far-right supremacist regimes, including the life stories of men who join far-right organisations, the dead-ends and limits of far-right politics, the creation of muscular, religious publics, and the relationship between authoritarian rule and public religiosity. A second, related, thread that runs through this work explores the relationship between aesthetics and politics, with a focus on the circulation, consumption, and co-production of media under authoritarian regimes.
Teaching
Currently, in 2024-25, I am teaching on these courses:
Empires; Culture and Power; South Asia (Culture, politics and economy); South Asia in the World.
In the past, I have taught core courses such as Anthropological Theory.
Works within
Staff Hours and Guidance
Publications by user content
Publication | Research Explorer link |
---|---|
Chatterjee M. Archives as infrastructure of anti-Muslim violence in India. Contributions to Indian Sociology . 2024 Jul 25;57(3):251-275. Epub 2024 Jul 25. doi: 10.1177/00699659231208696 |
View |
Chatterjee M. "What kind of Hindu are you?" Muscular Hinduism and the making of majorities and minorities. In Ibrahim F, editor, Studies in Religion and the Everyday. Oxford University Press. 2024. p. 89-108. (Oxford Studies In Contemporary Indian Society). doi: 10.1093/oso/9780198902782.003.0004 |
View |
Chatterjee M. Composing Violence: The Limits of Exposure and the Making of Minorities . Duke University Press, 2023. 184 p. (Theory in Forms). |
View |
Chatterjee M. Against the witness: Hindu nationalism and the law in India. Law, Culture and the Humanities. 2019 Feb 1;15(1):172-189. Epub 2016 Apr 8. doi: 10.1177/1743872116643693 |
View |
Chatterjee M. Beyond the Politics of Exposure: Reflections on Violence and Democracy from the South. The British Academy, 2019. |
View |
Chatterjee M. The ordinary life of Hindu supremacy: In conversation with a Bajrang Dal activist. Economic and Political Weekly. 2018 Jan 27;53(4). |
View |
Roy A, Dey N, Chatterjee M, Pande S. Unpacking Participatory Democracy: From Theory to Practice and from Practice to Theory. McGill University. 2018. |
View |
Chatterjee M. Meter reading. 2017. |
View |
Chatterjee M. The impunity effect: Majoritarian rule, everyday legality, and state formation in India. American Ethnologist. 2017 Feb 1;44(1):118-130. Epub 2017 Jan 24. doi: 10.1111/amet.12430 |
View |
Chatterjee M. Bandh politics: Crowds, spectacular violence, and sovereignty in India. Distinktion. 2016 Dec 8;17(3):294-307. doi: 10.1080/1600910X.2016.1258586 |
View |
Chatterjee M. Engaged anthropology in the time of late liberalism: Activists, anthropologists, and the state in India. Focaal. 2016 Dec 1;2016(76):117-122. doi: 10.3167/fcl.2016.760108 |
View |
Chatterjee M. After the Law. Economic and Political Weekly. 2014 Feb 16;49(16). |
View |
Chatterjee M. Modes of Encountering the Survivor of Violence: Reflections from AAA 2013. 2013. |
View |