Moral Languages from Colonial Punjab
Title | Moral Languages from Colonial Punjab PDF eBook |
Author | Bob van der Linden |
Publisher | Manohar Publishers |
Pages | 272 |
Release | 2008 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9788173047596 |
Socio-intellectual history of the Sicngha Sabhaa, Arya Samaj, and Ahmadiyya, voluntary reform movements.
The Social Space of Language
Title | The Social Space of Language PDF eBook |
Author | Farina Mir |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 293 |
Release | 2010 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0520262697 |
poetics of belonging in the region. --Book Jacket.
Education and Modernity in Colonial Punjab
Title | Education and Modernity in Colonial Punjab PDF eBook |
Author | Michael Philipp Brunner |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 292 |
Release | 2020-11-23 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 3030535142 |
This book explores the localisation of modernity in late colonial India. As a case study, it focuses on the hitherto untold colonial history of Khalsa College, Amritsar, a pioneering and highly influential educational institution founded in the British Indian province of Punjab in 1892 by the religious minority community of the Sikhs. Addressing topics such as politics, religion, rural development, militarism or physical education, the study shows how Sikh educationalists and activists made use of and ‘localised’ communal, imperial, national and transnational discourses and knowledge. Their modernist visions and schemes transcended both imperialist and mainstream nationalist frameworks and networks. In its quest to educate the modern Sikh – scientific, practical, disciplined and physically fit – the college navigated between very local and global claims, opportunities and contingencies, mirroring modernity’s ambivalent simultaneity of universalism and particularism.
Spatializing Popular Sufi Shrines in Punjab
Title | Spatializing Popular Sufi Shrines in Punjab PDF eBook |
Author | Yogesh Snehi |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Pages | 221 |
Release | 2019-04-24 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0429515634 |
This book explores the organic lives of popular Sufi shrines in contemporary Northwest India. It traverses the worldview of shrine spaces, rituals and their complex narratives, and provides an insight into their urban and rural landscapes in the post-Partition (Indian) Punjab. What happened to these shrines when attempts were made to dissuade Sikhs, Muslims and Hindus from their veneration of popular saints in the early twentieth century? What was the fate of popular shrines that persisted even when the Muslim population was virtually wiped off as a result of migration during Partition? How did these shrines manifest in the context of the threat posed by militants in the 1980s? How did such popular practices reconfigure themselves when some important centres of Sufism were left behind in the West Punjab (now Pakistan)? This book examines several of these questions and utilizes a combination of analytical tools, new theoretical tropes and an ethnographic approach to understand and situate popular Sufi shrines so that they are both historicized and spatialized. As such, it lays out some crucial contours of the method and practice of understanding popular sacred spaces (within India and elsewhere), bridging the everyday and the metanarratives of power structures and state formation. This book will be useful to scholars, researchers and those engaged in interdisciplinary work in history, social anthropology, historical sociology, cultural studies, historical geography, religion and art history, as well as those interested in Sufism and its shrines in South Asia.
Bhai Vir Singh (1872–1957)
Title | Bhai Vir Singh (1872–1957) PDF eBook |
Author | Anshu Malhotra |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Pages | 292 |
Release | 2023-04-27 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 1000867005 |
This volume brings together works by established and emerging scholars to consider the work and impact of Bhai Vir Singh. Bhai Vir Singh (1872-1957) was a major force in the shaping of modern Sikh and Punjabi culture, language, and politics in the undivided colonial Punjab, prior to the Partition of the province in 1947, and in the post-colonial state of India. The chapters in this book explore how he both reflected and shaped his time and context and address some of the ongoing legacy of his work in the lives of contemporary Sikhs. The contributors analyze the varied genres, literary, and historical that were adopted and adapted by Bhai Vir Singh to foreground and enhance Sikh religiosity and identity. These include his novels, didactic pamphlets, journalistic writing, prefatory and exegetical work on spiritual and secular historical documents, and his poems and lyrics, among others. This book will be of particular interest to those working in Sikh studies, South Asian studies, and post-colonial studies.
The Ahmadiyya in the Gold Coast
Title | The Ahmadiyya in the Gold Coast PDF eBook |
Author | John H. Hanson |
Publisher | Indiana University Press |
Pages | 308 |
Release | 2017-10-16 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN | 0253029511 |
The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, a global movement with more than half a million Ghanaian members, runs an extensive network of English-language schools and medical facilities in Ghana today. Founded in South Asia in 1889, the Ahmadiyya arrived in Ghana when a small coastal community invited an Ahmadiyya missionary to visit in 1921. Why did this invitation arise and how did the Ahmadiyya become such a vibrant religious community? John H. Hanson places the early history of the Ahmadiyya into the religious and cultural transformations of the British Gold Coast (colonial Ghana). Beginning with accounts of the visions of the African Methodist Binyameen Sam, Hanson reveals how Sam established a Muslim community in a coastal context dominated by indigenous expressions and Christian missions. Hanson also illuminates the Islamic networks that connected this small Muslim community through London to British India. African Ahmadi Muslims, working with a few South Asian Ahmadiyya missionaries, spread the Ahmadiyya's theological message and educational ethos with zeal and effectiveness. This is a global story of religious engagement, modernity, and cultural transformations arising at the dawn of independence.
Romantic Nationalism in India
Title | Romantic Nationalism in India PDF eBook |
Author | Bob van der Linden |
Publisher | BRILL |
Pages | 213 |
Release | 2024-05-16 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9004694803 |
Through the concept of ‘Romantic nationalism’, this interdisciplinary global historical study investigates cultural initiatives in (British) India that aimed at establishing the nation as a moral community and which preceded or accompanied state-oriented political nationalism. Drawing on a vast array of sources, it discusses important Romantic nationalist traits, such as the relationship between language and identity, historicism, artistic revivalism and hero worship. Ultimately, this innovative book argues that because of the confrontation with European civilization and processes of modernization at large, cultivation of culture in British India was morally and spiritually more important to the making of the nation than in Europe.