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Indian History - General & Miscellaneous, Asia - Civilization, India - Early History to 1765, India Historiography
Interpreting Early India by Romila Thapar — book cover

Interpreting Early India

by Romila Thapar
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Overview

Thapar argues the importance of understanding and positioning various well-established perspectives on the Indian past in order to arrive at an informed understanding of contemporary situations—such as disputes between Hindus and other Indian communities. It is vitally important for historians and informed lay readers to consider the wide range of opinions and views that are available on our past, particularly on religion and society in ancient India. Interpretations rise out of ideological conceptions. Thapar shows that the most influential ideologies which shaped the writing of early India initially had their moorings in European concerns; later, the rise of Indian nationalism questioned many of these conceptions; and most recently, these nationalist interpretations have also been questioned. This volume has essays on Durkheim and Weber's views on Indian caste and society; on D.D. Kosambi's contribution to Indian historiography; and on the recent attempts to project a composite Hinduism in early India by ignoring evidence on the existence of multiple communities and diverse identities.

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Book Details

Published
January 27, 1994
Publisher
Oxford Paperbacks
Pages
190
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780195633429

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