Abstract

ABSTRACT Citizenship can be seen as successive moments of heightened consciousness about belonging. Contests over citizenship in the contemporary world may be construed in terms of a constitutional moment which has transformed the Constitution into an ‘insurgent’ text – recasting the constitutional order from a fetter on democracy to one of re-iteration of the principles that were adopted by ‘We, the people’. The resurgent ‘people’ have claimed the power to ‘launch something unprecedented’ by recalling the constitutional moment. A range of innovative protests in India have inserted new idioms of constitutional citizenship through rallies and sit-ins, street art, and theatre, asking for a democratic conversation on the constitution and law. These iterations have led to a resurgence of citizenship by making the Constitution popular.

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