'This beautifully written book will surely become a classic in media and globalization studies and in the cultural sociology of contemporary India.' Arjun Appadurai, University of Chicago
'A theoretically rich and sophisticated contribution to the development of transnational cultural studies in which the comparisons do not always have to start from the assumed baseline of European-American cultural experience. This analysis of the heady mix of communalism, nationalism, market liberalism and consumerism in the case of recent Indian experience is replete with illuminating parallels for the study of the cultural dynamics of other sectors of the emerging global marketplace.' David Morley, Goldsmith's College, University of London
'Rajagopal changes our way of thinking about the world, not only in India, but everywhere: his book is indispensable for anyone who wants to understand how globalism and localism intersect.' Robert N. Bellah, author of Habits of the Heart
'Politics After Television … [w]ith brilliant theoretical acuity and empirical richness … analyzes how television redefines and forms part of a new circuit of politics and public culture in India. This is a superb and stimulating contribution to the study of contemporary politics in India.' Gyan Prakash, Princeton University
'… essential reading for anyone interested in understanding the growing influence of television in India.' Screen
'… a fascinating and illuminating book .' Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies