As India moves toward 2047—the centenary of its independence—the question before it is not just how to grow, but how to become. From this perspective, the key question that is anticipated by the present research paper is following: Is it possible to make a nation without initially imagining it? Incorporating the discernments of cultural studies, literary criticism, film theory, and media discourse analysis, the investigation illuminates that nation-building is not just a task in a way of overcoming infrastructural or economic issues, but rather a creative and ethical venture that gently paves its way over the time. Based on the concept of the “imagined communities” by Benedict Anderson, the notion of “cultural hegemony” by Antonio Gramsci, and the impression of the “media theory” by Marshall McLuhan, the enquiry employs the qualitative interpretation approach where literature, cinema, and media are among the critical elements of civic imagination. By means of detailed textual and contextual analysis, the study accomplishes a very convincing illustration of how narratives, which proceed from page to stage to image, can turn abstract constitutional ideals, e.g., dignity, justice, inclusiveness, sustainability, into long lasting affective experiences, therefore, triggering the transformation of India expected in 2047. The results indicate a mutual interdependence of cultural production and sociopolitical change where the narratives not only reflect the collective realities but also actively re-create the collective consciousness of the multitudes. Finally, the postulation discloses that it is the cultural imagination which as an invisible infrastructure assists ascent, concepts decent, and shapes the ethical prospect of Viksit Bharat 2047. Thus, a truly accomplished India cannot be assessed solely through material growth but through the richness, diversity, and totality of its shared narratives.
Dharmendra Kumar Singh (Thu,) studied this question.
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