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The ‘Early Medieval' Origins of India
Cambridge University Press, 12/3/2020
EAN 9781108748513, ISBN10: 1108748511
Paperback, 528 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 3.4 cm
Language: English
India is generally regarded as a civilization with a set of intrinsic attributes that emerged in the age of the Vedas or, better still, in the Harappan times. In recent decades, historical studies have moved away from rigid perspectives of singularity in origin and expansion; the emphasis now is on pluralities and long-term processes spanning centuries and millennia. There is also an influential school of thought which rejects antiquity claims such as these and holds that India is a construct of the colonial and nationalist imagination. In his radical reinterpretation of India's past, Manu V. Devadevan moves away from these reifying assessments to examine the evolution of institutions, ideas and identities that are characterized, typically, as Indian. In lieu of endorsing their Indianness, he traces their emergence to specific conditions that developed in India between 600 and 1200 CE, a period which historians now call the 'early medieval'.
List of tables
List of maps and figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I. Institutions
1. State formation and its structural foundations
2. From the cult of chivalry to the cult of personality
the seventh-century transformation in Pallava statecraft
3. Changes in land relations and the changing fortunes of the Cēra state
4. Temple and territory in the Puri Jagannātha imaginaire
Part II. Ideas
5. Svayamòbuddha's predilections
the epistemologies of time and knowledge
6. Bhāravi and the creation of a literary paradigm
7. Knowing and being
the semantic universe of the Kūdòiyātòtòamò theatre
8. The invention of zero and its intellectual legacy
Part III. Identities
9. The evolution of vernacular languages
a case study of Kannada
10. Religious identities in times of Indumaulòi's grief
11. Caste, gender and the landed patriarchy
12. The making of territorial self consciousness (with particular reference to Kaliṅga)
Bibliography
Index.