Moral languages from colonial Punjab : the Singh Sabha, Arya samaj and Ahmadiyahs

著者

    • Linden, Bob van der

書誌事項

Moral languages from colonial Punjab : the Singh Sabha, Arya samaj and Ahmadiyahs

Bob van der Linden

Manohar, 2008

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注記

Summary: Socio-intellectual history of the Siṅgha Sabhā, Arya Samaj, and Ahmadiyya, voluntary reform movements

Includes bibliographical references (p. [245]-259) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

After its annexation in 1849, the Punjab became the most important strategic and agricultural province of British India. Within a few decades, much changed in the region, including the intellectural horizons of the Punjabi elite. The monograph tells the comparative socio-intellectual history of the Singh Sabha (Sikh), Arya Samaj (Hindu) and Ahmadiyah (Muslim) voluntary reform movements. As a new contribution to the field, the term 'moral languages' is introduced to discuss the reformers' redefined traditions that emerged in response to Western reason and Christianity. Underwriting the Singh Sabha, Arya Samaj and Ahmadiyah moral languages was the fundamental process of strengthening doctrine, conduct, and ritual through a dialogic process in which readings of the traditional literature (often as interpreted by European Orientalist scholars) were combined with an understanding that frequently invoked the authority of science. In particular this volume argues that the secular-religious binary opposition, which has been so dominantly in existence since the European Enlightenment, hides more than it shows. Significant to the social consciousness of the Punjabi reformers was the partial overlap with the British civilising mission's underlying notion of improvement. The term moral languages emphasises that since the nineteenth-century religion is nothing more than morality motivated and spread through modern institutions and practices. Hence, the Singh Sabha, Arya Samaj and Ahmadiyah moral languages are discussed in term of modern traditions based on rational knowledge and practices that became vital to the struggle for authority and status in the context of an emergent liberal public sphere and processes of state formation. This timely book will be of great interest to scholars of British Punjab, South Asian colonial history and comparative religion.

目次

  • Preface
  • Introduction: Tradition, Rationality & Social Consciousness
  • Authority, State & the Civilizing Mission: A Fertile Region at the Afghan Border
  • A Subculture of Punjabi Public Men: Protestant Evangelicalism & Punjabi Voluntary Movements
  • Tradition, Rationality & Reform: Criticising Tradition & Society
  • Strengthening Identity Through Language, History & Patriarchy: Vernacular Language Politics
  • Community, Government & Social Consciousness: Comparative Moral Polemics
  • Conclusion: Moral Languages Over Time & Seas: Secularization & Cultural Dialogue
  • Moral Languages in Diaspora & World History
  • Key Dates
  • Glossary
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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