Scholar intellectuals in early modern India : discipline, sect, lineage and community

Bibliographic Information

Scholar intellectuals in early modern India : discipline, sect, lineage and community

edited by Christopher Minkowski, Rosalind O'Hanlon and Anand Venkatkrishnan

(South Asian history and culture)

Routledge, 2015

  • : hardback

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

In recent years, scholars from a wide range of disciplines have examined the revival in intellectual and literary cultures that took place during India's 'early modern' centuries. This was both a revival as well as a period of intense disputation and critical engagement. It took in the relationship of contemporaries to their own intellectual inheritances, shifts in the meaning and application of particular disciplines, the development of new literary genres and the emergence of new arenas and networks for the conduct of intellectual and religious debate. Exploring the worlds of Sanskrit and vernacular learning and piety in the subcontinent, these essays examine the role of individual scholar intellectuals in this revival, looking particularly at the interplay between intellectual discipline, sectarian links, family history and the personal religious interests of these men. Each essay offers a fine-grained study of an individual. Some are distinguished scholars, poets and religious leaders with subcontinent-wide reputations, others obscure provincial writers whose interest lies precisely in their relative anonymity. A particular focus of interest will be the way in which these men moved across the very different social milieus of early modern India, finding ways to negotiate relationships at courtly centres, temples, sectarian monasteries, the pandit assemblies of the cosmopolitan city of Banaras and lesser religious centres in the regions. This bookw as published as a special issue of South Asian History and Culture.

Table of Contents

1. Social history in the study of Indian intellectual cultures? 2. South meets North: Banaras from the perspective of Appayya Diksita 3. 'Disagreement without disrespect': transitions in a lineage from Bhattoji to Nagesa 4. Public philology: text criticism and the sectarianization of Hinduism in early modern south India 5. Eknath in context: the literary, social, and political milieus of an early modern saint-poet 6. Freed by the weight of history: polemic and doxography in sixteenth century Vedanta 7. Discourses of caste over the longue duree: Gopinatha and social classification in India, ca. 1400-1900 8. Darbar, matha, devasthanam: the politics of intellectual commitment and religious organization in sixteenth-century South India 9. Ritual, reflection, and religion: the Devas of Banaras 10. Envisioning the social order in a southern port city: the Tamil diary of Ananda Ranga Pillai

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