History, Ideas and Society: S.C. Mishra Memorial Lectures in History
EDITOR : S.Z.H. Jafri
HB ₹ 995 . $ 69.95 . £ 46.95 |
||
INFORMATION
- EDITOR : S.Z.H. Jafri
- HB ISBN : 978-93-80607-36-8
- Year : 2013
- Extent : 290 pp.
- Discount available on checkout
- Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.
Tagore
HB ₹ 995 . $ . ₤ |
PB ₹ . $ . ₤ |
|
POD ₹ . $ . ₤ |
e-Book ₹ . $ . ₤ |
INFORMATION
- AUTHOR –
- ISBN – 978-93-84082-78-9
- Year – 2016
- Extent: 400 + 40 coloured illustrations
- 10% discount + free shipping
- Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.
This volume concentrates on the concerns and problems that have informed scholarly reflection among historians of South Asia on precolonial and colonial India. In their scope and depth, the essays herein seek to serve as correctives to conventional perspectives in Indian history, particularly on the social consequences of colonialism and the socio-economic history of the precolonial period. The issues discussed include the effects of learning and education in colonial India, aspects of social reforms and caste-based politics, the emergence of religious identities leading to the problem of communalism in the modern period, and cultural nationalism and its limitations in the development of the modern nation state in India.
In attempting to understand the workings of the economy and the state in precolonial India, these essays use extant Persian and Bengali sources of the fourteenth-sixteenth centuries to explore the methods by which the Mughal State facilitated economic growth; facets of the currency system and agrarian relations; and premodern minting methods and numismatic history.
The Editor
S.Z.H. Jafri is Professor, Department of History, University of Delhi and Secretary and Incharge, Permanent Office, Indian History Congress, Department of History, University of Delhi.
As a global figure, Tagore transcends the boundaries of language and reaches out to people distant both in time and space. His art took inspiration from contemporary Western trends and became a powerful means to connect with people beyond Bengal. Word, image, song, and text were his tools of communication, as also his extraordinary presence in a sartorial garb of his own design. A littérateur in many genres, the impact of his work was determined both by the material he presented, and by its simultaneously local and global contexts. Now, when his international reputation has spanned over more than a hundred years, it is important to revisit the sites of Tagore’s eminence, and ask to what extent he was a ‘living text’ in the century that witnessed him as a global intellectual.
Accordingly, this volume investigates how Tagore’s writings and art are linked to the metalinguistic domains of the psychological, medical and mythical; how he was received in various cultures outside India; how his art was determined by individual circumstances and global aspirations; and how he acted as an inspiration to his contemporaries and subsequent generations including modern Indian writers and artists.
The Editor
Imre Bangha studied in Budapest and Santiniketan and at present is Associate Professor of Hindi at the University of Oxford. He has published books and essays in English, Hindi, and Hungarian on literature in Brajbhasha and other forms of old Hindi and has also prepared Hungarian translations from various South Asian languages. His work on the international reception of Bengali culture includes Rabindranath Tagore: Hundred Years of Global Reception (2014, co-edited with M. Kämpchen) and Hungry Tiger: Encounter between India and Central Europe (2007).
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Preface | vii-viii |
List of Editor and Contributors | ix |
Part 1 | |
History and Ideology | |
1. Seductive Orientalism: English Education and Modern Science in Colonial India | 3-20 |
Rajesh Kochhar | |
2. Issues in Writing Contemporary History: Perspective, Problems, Prospects | 21-31 |
Barun De | |
3. The Making of a Hegemonic Tradition: The Cult of R”ama D”a’sarathi | 33-63 |
Suvira Jaiswal | |
4. Mahatma Jyotirao Phule: Crusader for Social Justice | 65-79 |
J.V. Naik | |
Part 2 | |
Economic and Social History | |
5. The Techniques of Minting Coins in Ancient and Medieval India | 83-122 |
B.N. Mukherjee | |
6. Economic Development and the Communal Distortion of History in Medieval India | 131-143 |
Satish Chandra | |
7. Medieval Konkan: Its History, Society and Economy | 145-154 |
A.R. Kulkarni | |
8. A Preliminary Discussion on the Changing Economy of the Bengal Sultanate, c. 1350-c. 1575 | 155-200 |
Aniruddha Ray | |
9. Reinterpreting Santal Insurgency, The Hool of 1855 | 201-261 |
Binay Bhushan Chaudhuri | |
10. M odern India’s Unsung Pioneer Birth Control and Sex Education Movement | 263-274 |
J.V. Naik | |
Index | 275-283 |