THEORETICAL AMBIGUITY OF SOCIALIST/MARXIST NATIONALISM IN KERALA: P KRISHNA PILLAI’S TRAJECTORY FROM GANDHIAN NONVIOLENCE TO REVOLUTIONARY SPIRIT

Authors

  • Dileep P Chandran Assistant Professor (On Contract), Department of Political Science, University of Calicut, Kerala Author
  • Dr. Biju Lekshmanan Professor and Director, School of Gandhian Thought and Development Studies, Mahatma Gandhi University, Kerala, India Author

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Abstract

Socialists and Marxists in India had no objective theories on nationalism. Their political position during the national movement in India was shaped by the international political milieu. Krishna Pillai’s transition from a Congress member to a communist cadre and leader help to understand his changing political perspective on violence and nonviolence. His ambiguous position on Gandhian nonviolence shows the complexity of socialist and communist perceptions of political means in an anti-colonial struggle. Unlike Gandhi, Krishna Pillai upheld peace and justice, not truth and nonviolence, as rightful means in political struggle. He advocated revolutionary spirit in political methods, not necessarily violent means.

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Published

06-01-2023

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Copyright © 2026 by Dileep P Chandran, Dr. Biju Lekshmanan

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How to Cite

Chandran, Dileep P, and Dr. Biju Lekshmanan. “THEORETICAL AMBIGUITY OF SOCIALIST MARXIST NATIONALISM IN KERALA: P KRISHNA PILLAI’S TRAJECTORY FROM GANDHIAN NONVIOLENCE TO REVOLUTIONARY SPIRIT”. Indian Politics & Law Review Journal, vol. 8, Jan. 2023, pp. 198-15, https://journal.thelawbrigade.com/iplr/article/view/714.