Multiple Approaches to the Study of India’s Early Past: Essays in Theoretical Archaeology

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The essays included in this book are based on the invited lectures delivered by the author at various places in the country during the last five years. These essays endeavour to focus attention on one of the neglected-but truly vital-domains of Indian archaeology, viz. critical assessment of various theoretical approaches employed in the investigation of archaeological record in India and examination of the larger sociological dimensions of the study of the past. The first two essays examine the merits of New Archaeology and Interpretive Archaeology and their relevance in the Indian context. The third essay considers the place of non-professional writings about the past. The following essay highlights the larger scientific ferment in the nineteenth century which facilitated the birth of prehistory. The last two essays seek to draw attention to the inseparable links that exist between the past and the present in India and their sociological implications.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR K Paddayya

Dr. K. Paddayya is Professor of Geoarchaeology at the Deccan College, Pune. His prolonged research on the Paleolithic and Neolithic cultures of the Shorapur Doab in the Deccan, including the excavations at Hunsgi and Budihal, represents a major addition to post-Independence archaeology in India. He has published three books entitled Investigations into the Neolithic Culture of the Shorapur Doab, South India (Leiden, 1973); The Archeulian Culture of the Hunsgi Valley (Peninsular India): A Settlement System Perspective (Pune, 1982); and New Archaeology and Aftermath: A View from Outside the Anglo-American World (Pune, 1990) and many research papers in Indian and foreign journals.

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Bibliographic information

Title
Multiple Approaches to the Study of India’s Early Past: Essays in Theoretical Archaeology
Author
Edition
1st. ed.
Publisher
ISBN
9788173054785
Length
xvi+214p., Illustrations 45; Index; 15cm x 22cm.
Subjects