Rethinking Early Modern India

Rethinking Early Modern India

Product ID: 15915

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Author: Richard B Barnet
Editor(s): Richard B Barnet
Publisher: Manohar
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 326
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8173043086

Description

This anthology of ten papers in five disciplines, from a conference at the University of Virginia, vastly expands our understanding of the much-maligned early modern period of South Asian history and civilization. Written for both academic and general readers, these original forays in history, literature, art history, architecture, and drama illuminate South Asia’s development just prior to the rise and consolidation of the British Raj.

Together they seek to redress the misperception that late pre-colonial India was decadent, hapless, and mindlessly violent. Founded on painstaking research in original source material beyond the limits of the standard Mughal and colonial archives, these authors examine what south Asians were doing and thinking in the age of post-Mughal political segmentation, economic adjustment, and cultural redefinition. Her are some of the most active participants in the surge of interest in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and their India is full of surprises. Political pragmatism, intercommunal harmony ad syncretism, adroit cultural borrowing, keen technological interest, administrative flexibility, an intense commercial activity characterize this era between empires, rather than chaos, paralysis, ignorance and self-indulgence.

For those who dismiss the early modern period as some kind of an embarrassment to current-day patriotism, values, and tastes, this book is a convincing, gentle riposte.