Description

Book Synopsis
Contains an essential selection of primary readings on the social, intellectual, and religious history of India from the decline of Mughal rule in the eighteenth century to today.

Trade Review
The third edition of Sources of Indian Traditions is fascinating, easy to read, provocative, and relevant to the present. Two narrative lines flow, like an underground river, through the book: colonialism and the search for independence and the struggle with the ever-changing questions of nationalism. An excellent expansion of the second edition, this anthology is masterly organized, making it a unique teaching text on South Asia. -- Owen M. Lynch, New York University The third edition of Sources of Indian Traditions will assuredly be, like the earlier versions, an indispensable resource for teaching South Asia across a wide range of disciplines. The revisions are extensive and substantially reflect scholarly advances of recent years. Specialists and novices alike will learn from the texts that are included, and the organization and commentaries are bound to stimulate productive conversation and even controversy. -- Barbara D. Metcalf, University of California, Davis Anthologies come and go, and India becomes South Asia, but Sources of Indian Traditions remains the best-the best selected, best translated, and best annotated. It is to South Asian texts what the Oxford English Dictionary is to the English language: the gold standard. -- Wendy Doniger, University of Chicago

Table of Contents
Preface to the Third Edition Acknowledgments A Note on Transliteration Chronology Thematic Table of Contents Map 1. The Eighteenth Century: Ferment and Change 2. The Early to Mid Nineteenth Century: Debates Over Reform and Challenge to Empire 3. The Later Nineteenth Century: Leaders of Reform and Revival 4. Liberal Social and Political Thought in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century: The Moderates 5. Radical Politics and Cultural Criticism, 1880-1914: The Extremists 6. Mahatma Gandhi and Responses 7. To Independence and Partition 8. Issues in Post-Independence India 9. Pakistan, 1947-2007: The Struggle for National Identity 10. Bangladesh: Independence and Controversies Over the Fruits of Freedom Notes Bibliography Credits Index

Sources of Indian Traditions

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    A Paperback / softback by Rachel Fell McDermott, Leonard Gordon, Ainslie T. Embree

    2 in stock

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      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 15/09/2015
      ISBN13: 9780231138314, 978-0231138314
      ISBN10: 0231138318

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Contains an essential selection of primary readings on the social, intellectual, and religious history of India from the decline of Mughal rule in the eighteenth century to today.

      Trade Review
      The third edition of Sources of Indian Traditions is fascinating, easy to read, provocative, and relevant to the present. Two narrative lines flow, like an underground river, through the book: colonialism and the search for independence and the struggle with the ever-changing questions of nationalism. An excellent expansion of the second edition, this anthology is masterly organized, making it a unique teaching text on South Asia. -- Owen M. Lynch, New York University The third edition of Sources of Indian Traditions will assuredly be, like the earlier versions, an indispensable resource for teaching South Asia across a wide range of disciplines. The revisions are extensive and substantially reflect scholarly advances of recent years. Specialists and novices alike will learn from the texts that are included, and the organization and commentaries are bound to stimulate productive conversation and even controversy. -- Barbara D. Metcalf, University of California, Davis Anthologies come and go, and India becomes South Asia, but Sources of Indian Traditions remains the best-the best selected, best translated, and best annotated. It is to South Asian texts what the Oxford English Dictionary is to the English language: the gold standard. -- Wendy Doniger, University of Chicago

      Table of Contents
      Preface to the Third Edition Acknowledgments A Note on Transliteration Chronology Thematic Table of Contents Map 1. The Eighteenth Century: Ferment and Change 2. The Early to Mid Nineteenth Century: Debates Over Reform and Challenge to Empire 3. The Later Nineteenth Century: Leaders of Reform and Revival 4. Liberal Social and Political Thought in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century: The Moderates 5. Radical Politics and Cultural Criticism, 1880-1914: The Extremists 6. Mahatma Gandhi and Responses 7. To Independence and Partition 8. Issues in Post-Independence India 9. Pakistan, 1947-2007: The Struggle for National Identity 10. Bangladesh: Independence and Controversies Over the Fruits of Freedom Notes Bibliography Credits Index

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