Kingdoms of memory, empires of ink : the Veda and the regional print cultures of colonial India

Bibliographic Information

Kingdoms of memory, empires of ink : the Veda and the regional print cultures of colonial India

Cezary Galewicz

Jagiellonian University Press, c2020

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [259]-282) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The backbone of this book on books is a history of a most unusual concept of the book that developed in South Asia with reference to the Veda… By the 19th century, regional cultures of print showed an uneven and spatially discontinuous development across the Indian subcontinent. They variously fed on regional patterns of communication, configurations of power, patronage, and a new economic regime. Their development formed part of tremendous transformations in the structures of power, statecraft, authority, and communication that the subcontinent was going through while being gradually absorbed into the globalizing orbit of the emerging British Empire. The period witnessed a general shift of knowledge-production sites and relocation of distribution and text-circulation networks towards new urban centres…. This book tries to understand how the emerging regional cultures of print created conditions for, inspired, and accommodated differently configured projects of bringing out printed editions of Vedic texts while leaving distinct traces of their respective nature on their editorial principles, book format, typographic form, and publishing ideology.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction I. Objects, Spaces and Practices I.1. The Book as an object circulating in space I.2. The Rebel Book of the Veda II. The Veda Before Print II.1 The Beginnings: the travelling Veda II.2 The living libraries: the memorized Veda II.3 Performance and spectacle: The ritual Veda II.4 Scribes and scripture: the handwritten Veda II.5. The Veda commented upon II.5.1. The imperial commentary II.6 The Veda in the empire of writing III.The Coming of Print to Indian Subcontinent III.1 The Missionary, the Government and the Commercial Printers III.2 Preachers, printers and Pundits III.2.1The Jesuit printers of the western coast III.2.2 German Danish Evangelists on the Coromandel Coast III.2.3 The media revolution of Serampore 1800 –1837 III.2.4 Later Missionary print cultures III.3 The Empire in print and the Ethnographic State III.3.1 The Infernal machine III.3.2 The Government Press and imperial typography III.3.3 Print, catalogues and native knowledge III.3.4 The ethnographic state in print III.4 Indian Commercial Printing after 1835 (New Beginnings) IV.The Printed Veda IV.1 The lost, imagined and recovered Veda IV.2. The Philological Veda IV.3. The Imperial Veda IV.3.1. Max Muller and his patrons IV.4. The Printed Veda for Paṇḍitas and Pundits IV.5. The Veda printed in India IV.5.1 The polluting ink IV.5.2 Whose is the printed Veda IV.5.3. The codex and the pothi V. The reading practices V.1. The cultural concepts and practices of reading V.1.1 The svādhyāya and the brahma-yajña V.1.2 brahmavidyā-dāna V.1.3 The vidhāna tradition V.2. The regional practices of reading the Veda V.2.1 Modus legendi: daśagrantha V.2.2 Modus legendi: the veda-pārāyaṇa V.2.3 Modus legendi: the trisandhā VI. Towards Social history of print cultures in colonial India VI.1. Printing revolution and social change VI.2 Publishing Indian Religions in Print VI.2.1 Printing and Appropriation of the past VI.3 The regional print cultures and the Veda ABBREVIATIONS REFERENCES INDEX

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Details

  • NCID
    BD06873042
  • ISBN
    • 9788323343912
  • Country Code
    pl
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Krakow
  • Pages/Volumes
    302 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Subject Headings
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