Narrative Pasts: The Making of a Muslim Community in Gujarat, c. 1400-1650
Autor Jyoti Gulati Balachandranen Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 oct 2020
Preț: 434.81 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 652
Preț estimativ în valută:
83.24€ • 85.61$ • 69.06£
83.24€ • 85.61$ • 69.06£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 25 ianuarie-08 februarie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190123994
ISBN-10: 0190123990
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 149 x 223 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: OUP INDIA
Colecția OUP India
Locul publicării:Delhi, India
ISBN-10: 0190123990
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 149 x 223 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: OUP INDIA
Colecția OUP India
Locul publicării:Delhi, India
Recenzii
Balachandran's book makes a number of important contributions. It provides a different angle on medieval Indian history, focusing on community-building versus conquest; it revises the received wisdom regarding the fifteenth century(not exhibiting the patterns of 'region versus centre' and 'linear decline overtime' but rather finding multi-centredness and simultaneous developments);and it expands the archive to include somewhat neglected genres, such as hagiography, genealogy and Sufi discourses.
Narrative Pasts makes an important methodological intervention, where Balachandran critically reads texts deemed 'religious' or 'hagiographic' for their political, historical, and commemorative significance. It is a model for premodern scholarship that takes seriously the ways in which history and memory are equally invested in the making of community.
Narrative Pasts is a timely addition to the growing body of socio-cultural and historical studies on pre-colonial Gujarat. By focusing on histories of migration, settlement, regional integration and community formation, this book also implicitly questions the retrospective politics of polarization and narratives of conflict, invasion and aggression largely centred on the dynamic of the insider and outsider.
'Narrative Pasts is a carefully researched social history of the making of a Muslim community in Gujarat through the 15th-17th centuries...This important intervention provides insights into the processes through which Islam and the Muslim community can be historicised - in Gujarat certainly - but also more universally.'
Balachandran's outstanding book brings to light the dense web of relationships-of power, kinship, and memory-that constituted Gujarat's politics...The book will be essential reading for anyone interested in precolonial India, South Asian Islam, or the history of textual transmission.' -Samira Sheikh, Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies, Vanderbilt University, USA
Narrative Pasts makes an important methodological intervention, where Balachandran critically reads texts deemed 'religious' or 'hagiographic' for their political, historical, and commemorative significance. It is a model for premodern scholarship that takes seriously the ways in which history and memory are equally invested in the making of community.
Narrative Pasts is a timely addition to the growing body of socio-cultural and historical studies on pre-colonial Gujarat. By focusing on histories of migration, settlement, regional integration and community formation, this book also implicitly questions the retrospective politics of polarization and narratives of conflict, invasion and aggression largely centred on the dynamic of the insider and outsider.
'Narrative Pasts is a carefully researched social history of the making of a Muslim community in Gujarat through the 15th-17th centuries...This important intervention provides insights into the processes through which Islam and the Muslim community can be historicised - in Gujarat certainly - but also more universally.'
Balachandran's outstanding book brings to light the dense web of relationships-of power, kinship, and memory-that constituted Gujarat's politics...The book will be essential reading for anyone interested in precolonial India, South Asian Islam, or the history of textual transmission.' -Samira Sheikh, Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies, Vanderbilt University, USA
Notă biografică
Jyoti Gulati Balachandran is Assistant Professor of History at Pennsylvania State University. A historian of medieval and early modern (c. 1200-1800) South Asia, Balachandran received her doctoral degree at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is interested in social and cultural histories of Muslim communities in Gujarat and the wider Indian Ocean world. Her research has appeared in the Indian Economic and Social History Review and she has contributed several articles to the third edition of the Encyclopaedia of Islam.