The Bengal Renaissance

The Bengal Renaissance

Product ID: 19416

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Author: Subrata Dasgupta
Publisher: Permanent Black
Year: 2007
Language: English
Pages: 280
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8178241773

Description

Scholars have long debated the very idea of a Bengal Renaissance. The controversies have been largely over whether there was a renaissance at all, and its significance from social, political, and cultural perspectives.

This book addresses the issue from the perspective of philosophy of science and the psychology of creativity. Dasgupta shows that the Bengal Renaissance is characterized by a collective cognitive identity which had its roots in British Orientalism and flowered within a remarkable community of creative individuals in nineteenth-century Bengal which included writers, reformers, mystics, and scientists.

Dasgupta outlines the core work of such notable figures as Ramadun Roy, Henry derozio, Michael Madhusudan Datta, Bankimchndra Chattopadhyay, J C Bose, P C Ray, Sri Ramakrishna, Swami Vevekananda, and Rabindranath Tagore. He analyses their distinctive style, contribution to an intellectual milieu, and effect on cultural life.

The author unveils the precise cognitive nature of their creativity in Indology, theology, literature, science, and practical religion. He demonstrates their ‘cross-cultural mentality’ and ‘universalism’, arguing that their creativity represents a cognitive revolution in Indian cultural history.

Accessible and elegantly written, this is a book for general readers looking for an introduction to the Bengal Renaissance; scholars familiar with the area will find its perspective both novel and compelling.

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

PROLOGUE

1. Cognitive Identity and Creative Mentality-in Colonial Bengal
2. An ‘Orientalist’ Cognitive Identity-and its Subversion
3. Inventing a Monotheistic Movement
4. Constructing a Cross-Cultural Mentality
5. Writing for the People, Composing for a Nation
6. Creating a Scientific Consciousness, Refuting a Western Belief
7. Perceiving the One in the Many
8. Composing the Universal Song: Work-in-Progress

EPILOGUE: ARCHITECTURE OF A COGNITIVE REVOLUTION

BIBLIOGRAPHY

INDEX