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Dineshchandra Sen
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 116

Dineshchandra Sen

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1990
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

History of Bengali Language and Literature
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1120

History of Bengali Language and Literature

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1911
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Ballads of Bengal
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1028

The Ballads of Bengal

None

The Bengali Ramayanas
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 346

The Bengali Ramayanas

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1920
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

A Woman's Ramayana
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 166

A Woman's Ramayana

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-07-18
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  • Publisher: Routledge

The Rāmāyana, an ancient epic of India, with audiences across vast stretches of time and geography, continues to influence numberless readers socially and morally through its many re-tellings. Made available in English for the first time, the 16th century version presented here is by Candrāvatī, a woman poet from Bengal. It is a highly individual rendition as a tale told from a woman's point of view which, instead of celebrating masculine heroism, laments the suffering of women caught in the play of male ego. This book presents a translation and commentary on the text, with an extensive introduction that scrutinizes its social and cultural context and correlates its literary identity with its ideological implications. Taken together, the narrative and the critical study offered here expand the understanding both of the history of women’s self-expression in India and the cultural potency of the epic tale. The book is of interest equally to students and researchers of South Asian narratives, Rāmāyana studies and gender issues.

Time, History and the Religious Imaginary in South Asia
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 225

Time, History and the Religious Imaginary in South Asia

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012-03-12
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Religious imaginary is a way of conceiving and structuring the world within the conceptual and imaginative traditions of the religious. Using religious imaginary as a reference, this book analyses temporal ideologies and expressions of historicity in South Asia in the early modern, pre-colonial and early colonial period. Chapters explore the multiple understandings of time and the past that informed the historical imagination in various kinds of literary representations, including historiographical and literary texts, hagiography, and religious canonical literature. The book addresses the contributing forces and comparative implications of the formation of religious and communitarian sensibilities as expressed through the imagination of the past, and suggests how these relate to each other within and across traditions in South Asia. By bringing diverse materials together, this book presents new commonalities and distinctions that inform a larger understanding of how religion and other cultural formations impinge on the concept of temporality, and the representation of it as history.

Cosmopolitan Cultures and Oceanic Thought
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 258

Cosmopolitan Cultures and Oceanic Thought

This book imagines the ocean as central to understanding the world and its connections in history, literature and the social sciences. Introducing the central conceptual category of ocean as method, it analyzes the histories of movement and traversing across connected spaces of water and land sedimented in literary texts, folklore, local histories, autobiographies, music and performance. It explores the constant flow of people, material and ideologies across the waters and how they make their presence felt in a cosmopolitan thinking of the connections of the world. Going beyond violent histories of slavery and indenture that generate global connections, it tracks the movements of sailors, boatmen, religious teachers, merchants, and adventurers. The essays in this volume summon up this miscegenated history in which land and water are ever linked. A significant rethinking of world history, this volume will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of history, especially connected history and maritime history, literature, and Global South studies.

The Nation and Its Fragments
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 296

The Nation and Its Fragments

In this book, the prominent theorist Partha Chatterjee looks at the creative and powerful results of the nationalist imagination in Asia and Africa that are posited not on identity but on difference with the nationalism propagated by the West. Arguing that scholars have been mistaken in equating political nationalism with nationalism as such, he shows how anticolonialist nationalists produced their own domain of sovereignty within colonial society well before beginning their political battle with the imperial power. These nationalists divided their culture into material and spiritual domains, and staked an early claim to the spiritual sphere, represented by religion, caste, women and the fam...

Notions of Nationhood in Bengal: Perspectives on Samaj, c. 1867-1905
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 424

Notions of Nationhood in Bengal: Perspectives on Samaj, c. 1867-1905

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2009-06-24
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  • Publisher: BRILL

This book reopens the debate on colonial nationalisms, going beyond ‘derivative’, ‘borrowed’, political and modernist paradigms. It introduces the conceptual category of samaj to demonstrate how indigenous socio-cultural origins in Bengal interacted with late-colonial discourses to produce the notion of a nation. Samaj (a historical society and an idea-in-practice) was a site for reconfiguring antecedents and negotiating fragmentation. Drawing on indigenous sources, this study shows how caste, class, ethnicity, region and community were refracted to conceptualise wider unities. The mapping of cultural continuities through change facilitates a more nuanced investigation of the ontology of nationhood, seeing it as related to, but more than political nationalism. It outlines a fresh paradigm for recalibrating postcolonial identities, offering interpretive strategies to mediate fragmentation.

Cultural Constellations, Place-Making and Ethnicity in Eastern India, c. 1850-1927
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 422

Cultural Constellations, Place-Making and Ethnicity in Eastern India, c. 1850-1927

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-11-01
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  • Publisher: BRILL

In Cultural Constellations, Place-Making and Ethnicity in Eastern India, c. 1850-1927, Swarupa Gupta outlines a fresh paradigm moving beyond stereotypical representations of eastern India as a site of ethnic fragmentation. The book traces unities by exploring intersections between (1) cultural constellations; (2) place-making and (3) ethnicity. Centralising place-making, it tells the story of how people made places, mediating caste / religious / linguistic contestations. It offers new meanings of ‘region’ in Eastern Indian and global contexts by showing how an interregional arena comprising Bengal, Assam and Orissa was forged. Using historical tracts, novels, poetry and travelogues, the book argues that commonalities in Eastern India were linked to imaginings of Indian nationhood. The analysis contains interpretive strategies for mediating federalist separatisms and fragmentation in contemporary India.