Two puzzles of modern India—one well known,  the other overlooked—form the core of this book. 
  For fifty years, the state of Kerala has been  famed, first as a home of Communists, then as a perplexing ‘model of  development’. But why Communists? And why development, especially in a place  where the economy usually underperformed even lowly national averages? Part of  an answer lies in the unusual place of women in Kerala and their changing role  in the past 200 years. 
  Another part lies in the other, often  under-analyzed focus of this book: media and communication. Printing and  publishing in Indian languages—and accompanying questions of literacy and  language identity—present tantalizing puzzles. 
  Since data were first collected in the 1950s,  Kerala’s people have been India’s greatest newspaper consumers. Do literacy and  newspapers mobilize people for political action or does politicization make  people into newspaper readers? To what extent do media wait on consumer  capitalism before they break into the countryside to become truly mass media, as they have in India in the  past thirty years?
  Media and Modernity ponders these questions,  first from the perspective of Kerala, often a forerunner of developments  elsewhere, and then at an all-India level. Readers intrigued by questions of  development, communications, politics, and the role of women will find in this  collection stories that surprise and arguments that provoke.