Crime through time
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Crime through time
(Oxford in India readings, . Themes in Indian history)
Oxford University Press, 2013
Available at 1 libraries
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  Hiroshima
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  Saga
  Nagasaki
  Kumamoto
  Oita
  Miyazaki
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Note
Contributed articles; some previously published
Includes bibliographical references (p. [276]-307) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Part of the prestigious Themes in Indian History series, this book deals with notions, ideas, and concepts of crime and justice from the eighteenth to the twentieth century. Divided into four sections, the first deals with the pre-colonial period with its decentralized law and justice system. The second addresses the colonial period and cites the administrative and legal changes during that period like legal codifications, policing, tattooing and other technologies identification. The section
on subaltern legalities studies customary laws and their negotiations with colonial laws. The final section studies the nature of crimes in post-independence India, and discusses issues like violence on Dalits and minorities.
This book will be of great interest to scholars and students of modern Indian history, sociology, and cultural studies.
Table of Contents
- SERIES NOTE
- PREFACE
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- INTRODUCTION
- PART I. PRECOLONIAL PREMONITIONS:
- 1. WRONGS AND RIGHTS IN THE MARATHA COUNTRY: ANTIQUITY, CUSTOM AND POWER IN EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY INDIA BY SUMIT GUHA
- 2. THE BANDIT AS KING BY MALAVIKA KASTURI
- PART II. COLONIAL CONCERNS:
- 3. FRAMED, BLAMED AND RENAMED: THE RECASTING OF ISLAMIC JURISPRUDENCE IN MODERN ASIAN STUDIES BY SCOTT ALAN KUGLE
- 4. DISCIPLINING AND POLICING THE 'CRIMINALS BY BIRTH': DEVELOPMENT OF A DISCIPLINARY SYSTEM, 1871-1900 BY SANJAY NIGAM
- 5. CRIMINAL COMMUNITIES BY RADHIKA SINGHA
- 6. POLICE AND PUBLIC ORDER BY RAJNARAYAN CHANDAVARKAR
- 7. DISCIPLINING 'NATIVES': PRISONS AND PRISONERS IN EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY INDIA BY ANAND A. YANG
- 8. THE SELF AND THE CELL: INDIAN PRISON NARRATIVES AS LIFE HISTORIES BY DAVID ARNOLD
- PART III. LEGALITIES AND ILLEGALITIES:
- 9. AMBIGUITY BY RANAJIT GUHA
- 10. THE EMERGENCE OF FEMINISM IN INDIA, 1850-1920 BY PADMA ANAGOL
- 11. TELLING TALES BY SAURABH DUBE
- PART IV. POSTCOLONIAL PREDILECTIONS
- 12. OUTLAW WOMAN: THE POLITICS OF PHOOLAN DEVI BY RAJESWARI SUNDER RAJAN
- 13. DEATH OF A KOTWAL: THE INJURIOUS POLITICS OF RECOGNITION BY ANUPAMA RAO
- 14. SEMIOTICS OF TERROR: MUSLIM CHILDREN AND WOMEN IN HINDU RASHTRA BY TANIKA SARKAR
- ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
- NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
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