Insights and Interventions: Essays in Honour of Uma Chakravarti

EDITOR- Kumkum Roy

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INFORMATION

  • EDITOR : Kumkum Roy
  • HB ISBN : 978-93-80607-22-1
  • Year : 2011
  • Extent : viii + 192 pp.
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  • Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.

Insights and Interventions

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INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR –
  • ISBN – 978-93-80607-22-1
  • Year – 2011
  • Extent: 400 + 40 coloured illustrations
  • 10% discount + free shipping
  • Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.

Uma Chakravarti, feminist historian, teacher, and democratic rights’ activist, has inspired generations of teachers, students and friends. This volume, including contributions from a handful of those who share her concerns, is a tribute to her energy, commitment and perseverance in pursuing her ideas and dreams.<br>&nbsp; &nbsp; Is it possible to extend interventions from the classroom to the community? How do we strive towards a more integrated vision and praxis without falling into the trap of uniformity? Delving into texts ranging from the Rigveda to contemporary Dalit literature, and using diverse analytical strategies to understand present-day situations and experiences, the contributors offer insights, share concerns, and uncertainties through their essays and narratives. The themes addressed include issues of caste, nationalism, gendered identities, communalization, sexualities, socio-political relationships in all their complexities and the modes of transmission of ancient texts.<br>&nbsp; &nbsp; The contributors include scholars/teachers who, like Uma, attempt to bridge the worlds of academics and activism, as well as young researchers who share her enthusiasm for ancient Indian history.

The Editor
Kumkum Roy teaches at the Centre for Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Her doctoral thesis on ‘The Emergence of Monarchy in North India’ was published in 1994. She has edited an anthology titled Women in Early Indian Societies (1999). Her other publications include A Historical Dictionary of Ancient India (2009), and The Power of Gender and the Gender of Power (2010). Her areas of interest include political institutions, social history and issues of gender, as well as pedagogies of history teaching in schools and other institutions.

Contributors
Naina Dayal l V. Geetha l Bharati Jagannathan l Rashmi Paliwal l Sharmila Rege l Kumkum Roy l Meera Visvanathan

‘Uma Chakravarti, feminist historian, teacher, and democratic rights’ activist, has inspired generations of teachers and students. Contributors to this volume, in the process of acknowledging their indebtedness to or by way of paying tribute to the never-say-done spirit of Uma, take off from and build upon the insights her varied and rich scholarship has brought to the discipline of History…’— PADMINI SWAMINATHAN, The Hindu

Uma Chakravarti, feminist historian, teacher, and democratic rights’ activist, has inspired generations of teachers, students and friends. This volume, including contributions from a handful of those who share her concerns, is a tribute to her energy, commitment and perseverance in pursuing her ideas and dreams.<br>&nbsp; &nbsp; Is it possible to extend interventions from the classroom to the community? How do we strive towards a more integrated vision and praxis without falling into the trap of uniformity? Delving into texts ranging from the Rigveda to contemporary Dalit literature, and using diverse analytical strategies to understand present-day situations and experiences, the contributors offer insights, share concerns, and uncertainties through their essays and narratives. The themes addressed include issues of caste, nationalism, gendered identities, communalization, sexualities, socio-political relationships in all their complexities and the modes of transmission of ancient texts.<br>&nbsp; &nbsp; The contributors include scholars/teachers who, like Uma, attempt to bridge the worlds of academics and activism, as well as young researchers who share her enthusiasm for ancient Indian history.

The Editor
Kumkum Roy teaches at the Centre for Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Her doctoral thesis on ‘The Emergence of Monarchy in North India’ was published in 1994. She has edited an anthology titled Women in Early Indian Societies (1999). Her other publications include A Historical Dictionary of Ancient India (2009), and The Power of Gender and the Gender of Power (2010). Her areas of interest include political institutions, social history and issues of gender, as well as pedagogies of history teaching in schools and other institutions.

Contributors
Naina Dayal l V. Geetha l Bharati Jagannathan l Rashmi Paliwal l Sharmila Rege l Kumkum Roy l Meera Visvanathan

‘Uma Chakravarti, feminist historian, teacher, and democratic rights’ activist, has inspired generations of teachers and students. Contributors to this volume, in the process of acknowledging their indebtedness to or by way of paying tribute to the never-say-done spirit of Uma, take off from and build upon the insights her varied and rich scholarship has brought to the discipline of History…’— PADMINI SWAMINATHAN, The Hindu

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface vii
Introduction Kumkum Roy 1-18
Part I Debates
The Vedic Dasi And Other Missing Women: Thinking About Nationalism With Uma Chakravarti V. Geethan 21-38
Women’s Studies Since The 1990s:Mapping New Conjunctures,Challenges And Strategies Sharmila Rege 39-74
Conversations On Caste Rashmi Paliwal 75-86
Part II Narratives
Crime And Atonement Bharati Jagannathan 89-99
Nobody Must Know Bharati Jagannathan 101-103
The Goddess Of Palai Bharati Jagannathan 105-113
Part III Texts And Traditions
On The Premier Performances Of The Ramayana Of Valmiki Naina Dayal 117-142
Cosmology And Critique:
Charting A History Of The Purusha Sukta Meera Visvanathan
143-167
Bonds Beyond Bondage: Representations Of Friendship In The Jatakas Kumkum Roy 169-181
Notes On Contributors 183-184
Index 185-191