000 01938cam a2200157 a 4500
999 _c58864
_d58864
020 _a9789386392602
082 0 0 _a954
_bDIL/C
100 _aDilip M Menon
245 0 0 _aCultural history of modern India
250 _a2
260 _aHyderabad
_bOrient Blackswan
_c2017.
300 _a210p.
520 _aThe history of modern India has been narrated largely in terms of the nationalist movement, personalities and what has been seen as the ‘high’ politics of the state. Recent shifts in history writing have tried to bring in subordinated histories of regions and of groups. We are moving towards a wider understanding of politics, history and of the ordinary people who make history. <em>Cultural History of Modern India</em> tries to push the emerging paradigm further by moving away from conventional notions of the history of the nation and indeed of the political. The seven essays in this collection present original and pioneering forays in the study of cricket, oral history, gender studies, film, popular culture and Indian classical music. Whether looking at issues of caste on the seemingly level-playing field of cricket in early twentieth-century India; or how a nineteenth-century housewife comes to pen the first autobiography by an Indian woman; calendar art reflecting deeper notions of religion and community; or how an idea of ‘pure’ classical music faces the challenge of technology, these essays show how ideas of self, community and art are formed within a larger politics. Moreover, culture far from being a refuge from the political is also the space within which politics comes to be worked out. This book serves as an introduction to the idea of cultural history in modern India and is aimed at the layperson as much as an undergraduate and graduate audience in the social sciences and humanities.
650 0 _aPopular culture-India
_aCivilization
_aNationalism
942 _cBK