The Changing Gaze: Regions and the Constructions of Early India

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The book is an attempt to understand history writing in India that focuses on changing perspectives about early India, such as, the move away from the epicentric approach in the 1970s to the focus on localities and sub-regions from historico-geographic blocks like the Gangetic heartland. Dealing with the histories of regions round Odisha and Chhattisgarh in particular, it contains a dozen papers on the differences and linkages between regions—the continued interplay and coexistence of the local and trans-regional elements—by studying various trends of historical development: the role of brahmanical ideology in the construction of caste, conception of the Kali Age in early India, role of varna in shaping early Oriya society and jati working of agrarian land systems, forms of protest and dissent and evolution of regional identities in Indian historiography.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Bhairabi Prasad Sahu

Bhairabi Prasad Sahu teaches at the Department of History, University of Delhi. He is the author of From Hunters to Broders: Faunal Background of Early India (1988), and has edited Land System and Rural Society in Early India (1997).

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Bibliographic information

Title
The Changing Gaze: Regions and the Constructions of Early India
Author
Edition
1st. ed.
Publisher
ISBN
0198089198, 9780198089193
Length
xiii+340p., 2 Maps; 23cm.
Subjects