Power in Print

Popular Publishing and the Politics of Language and Culture in a Colonial Society, 1778-1905

Price: 850.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780195673296

Publication date:

26/12/2005

Hardback

360 pages

Price: 850.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780195673296

Publication date:

26/12/2005

Hardback

360 pages

Anindita Ghosh

By trying to explore a narrative of dissent, struggle, and conflict among various contending speech communities, this MS tries to have a re-look at some fundamental debates in the cultural experience of the educated middle classes in nineteenth century colonial Bengal. More specifically, it tries to study power and representation in colonial Bengal through the print-language and literature and its impact on the resultant identity formations.

Rights:  World Rights

Anindita Ghosh

Description

By trying to explore a narrative of dissent, struggle, and conflict among various contending speech communities, this MS tries to have a re-look at some fundamental debates in the cultural experience of the educated middle classes in nineteenth century colonial Bengal. More specifically, it tries to study power and representation in colonial Bengal through the print-language and literature and its impact on the resultant identity formations. In the nineteenth century, language and its written literature was more than anything else, object of immense debate, scrutiny, and surveillance among the Bengalis and the colonial administration. But what is often less understood is that print languages and literature were also vital instruments for crafting social identities, and in a competitive environment like colonial Bengal, they offered substantial opportunities to indigenous groups to consolidated power along multiple axes of class, gender and community. By trying to relocate within the world of Bengali print groups previously thought to inhabit the peripheries of literate cultures, the volume also tries to challenge the conventional understandings of social formation in the nineteenth century.

About the Author


Anindita Ghosh, School of History and Classics, University of Manchester

Anindita Ghosh

Table of contents

Introduction
Chapter 1. New Bengali and its Makers
Chapter 2. Language, Literature, and Reform
Chapter 3. The Battala Book Market
Chapter 4. Contesting Print Audiences
Chapter 5. Satire and Social Discord
Chapter 6. Women Refusing Conformity
Chapter 7. Bengali and its Muslim Other
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

Anindita Ghosh

Anindita Ghosh

Review

"...the first major account in English, and is therefore to be welcomed." - Times Higher Education Supplement,"Comprehensively researched and persuasively argued, Ghosh's book is a tour de force" - Shafquat Towheed, Wasafiri

Anindita Ghosh

Description

By trying to explore a narrative of dissent, struggle, and conflict among various contending speech communities, this MS tries to have a re-look at some fundamental debates in the cultural experience of the educated middle classes in nineteenth century colonial Bengal. More specifically, it tries to study power and representation in colonial Bengal through the print-language and literature and its impact on the resultant identity formations. In the nineteenth century, language and its written literature was more than anything else, object of immense debate, scrutiny, and surveillance among the Bengalis and the colonial administration. But what is often less understood is that print languages and literature were also vital instruments for crafting social identities, and in a competitive environment like colonial Bengal, they offered substantial opportunities to indigenous groups to consolidated power along multiple axes of class, gender and community. By trying to relocate within the world of Bengali print groups previously thought to inhabit the peripheries of literate cultures, the volume also tries to challenge the conventional understandings of social formation in the nineteenth century.

About the Author


Anindita Ghosh, School of History and Classics, University of Manchester

Table of contents

Introduction
Chapter 1. New Bengali and its Makers
Chapter 2. Language, Literature, and Reform
Chapter 3. The Battala Book Market
Chapter 4. Contesting Print Audiences
Chapter 5. Satire and Social Discord
Chapter 6. Women Refusing Conformity
Chapter 7. Bengali and its Muslim Other
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index