Textures Of The Sikh Past

Textures Of The Sikh Past

Product ID: 22650

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Author: Tony Ballantyne
Translator(s)/ Edito: Tony Ballantyne
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2007
Language: English
Pages: 328
ISBN/UPC (if available): 0195686632

Description

Focusing on new directions in Sikh and Punjab studies, this volume offers fresh perspectives on Sikh culture and history. Discussing contemporary developments affecting Sikhs around the world, it provides a contextualized study of how modern Sikhism has evolved with particular attention to historical documents, changes in the colonial period, and the varied yet intertwined experiences of Sikhs in the Diaspora.

This valuable collection addresses a wide variety of themes including Sikh textual tradition and popular culture, operation of social hierarchies, local histories, transformation of Punjab under British rule, and other social issues that concern the Panth as a whole. The essays are united by a deep concern with the ‘texture’ of Sikh history –– the ways in which space, time, social structures, and political systems have shaped the development of the Panth. They also investigate the forces, processes, and structures that have conditioned Sikh history.

In bringing together this range of carefully researched perspectives, this book not only offers a compelling manifestation of the complex fabric of Sikh history, but also identifies new approaches that will provide vantage points for further research.

CONTRIBUTORS:
TONY BALLANTYNE
HIMADRI BANERJEE
N. G. BARRIER
IAN CATANACH
LOUIS E. FENECH
IAN J. KERR
W. H. MCLEOD
AMRIT KAUR SINGH
RABINDRA KAUR SINGH
PASHAURA SINGH
JOHN WEBSTER

Contents

Preface

Introduction
Tony Ballantyne

Hew McLeod and the Development of Sikh Studies
N.G. Barrier

Vanjara Pothi: A New Source in the Formation of the
Sikh Canon
Pashaura Singh

The two Lives of Bhai Nand Lal ‘Goya’
Louis E. Fenech

Sikhs and Caste
W.H. McLeod

The Dalit Sikhs: A History?
John C.B. Webster

British Rule, Technological Change, and the
Revolution in Transportation and Communication:
Punjab in the Later Nineteenth century
Ian J. Kerr

Punjab ad the Sikhs through the Prism of Plague
Ian Catanach

Sikhism in Orissa: From the world of the
Nanakpanthis to the Domain of the Khalsa
Himadri Banerjee

Bangra and the Project of Sikh Studies
Tony Ballantyne

Tradition and History: Modern Communication and
‘Sikh-Diaspora’
N. G. Barrier

Sikhism and the Visual Arts
Amrit and Rabindra Kaur Singh


Notes on Contributors