The prevailing narratives about the Himalaya are often shaped by distant centres of power, filtered through colonial and postcolonial lenses that reduce the region to a strategic frontier, an exotic landscape, or a militarised zone marked by borders on snow-covered peaks.In the Margins of Empireschallenges this limited gaze by shifting attention away from geopolitical abstractions to the lived realities of the people who have long called the Himalaya home. Through a deeply grounded and regionally rooted perspective, the book presents the Eastern Himalaya as an interconnected world shaped by centuries of trade, travel, scholarship, monastic exchanges, and political intrigue. Set against the backdrop of rising India–China rivalry after the 1962 war and continuing into the present, Akhilesh Upadhyay offers a nuanced portrait of communities navigating life between powerful empires while quietly shaping their own futures in one of the world’s most contested regions.
Why You Should Read?
It moves beyond the “imperial gaze” to foreground the voices, histories, and livelihoods of Himalayan borderland communities.
It presents the Eastern Himalaya—Nepal, Bhutan, Tibet, Sikkim, Darjeeling, and India’s North-East—as an organic, historically connected region rather than fragmented political units.
It offers timely insights into India–China geopolitics and the impact of border infrastructure and strategic competition on smaller states and local populations.
It combines fresh analysis with on-the-ground reportage, making complex regional dynamics accessible and compelling.
It invites readers to rethink the future of the Himalaya, not just as a geopolitical chessboard, but as a living, evolving region shaped from within.