Religious Movements in South Asia 600-1800
Price: 595.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195678765
Publication date:
07/10/2005
Paperback
388 pages
216x140mm
Price: 595.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195678765
Publication date:
07/10/2005
Paperback
388 pages
Part of Oxford India Paperbacks
David N. Lorenzen
This book addresses a range of debates regarding religious movements in the medieval and early modern periods. Eleven key essays debate the linkages between the religious and worldly aims of different movements and the continuity and change in their ideologies, social bases, and organizational structures over time.
Rights: World Rights
David N. Lorenzen
Description
It provides a picture, fascinating...of some of the religious movements in Indian history.' - The book Review
This book addresses a range of debates regarding religious movements in the medieval and early modern periods. Eleven key essays debate the linkages between the religious and worldly aims of different movements and the continuity and change in their ideologies, social bases, and organizational structures over time. They present divergent views on important issues such as the relationship between caste and the sect, the idea of renunciation, the role of the Sufis in the conversion to Islam in medieval India, and the ways in which many South Asian popular movements emerged and gathered force.
In an insightful introduction by David Lorenzen, each debate is discussed in its historical and theoretical context. The influence of Dumont, Engels, and Weber on our understanding of the nature of religious movemtns in and beyond the South Asia is also analysed. Part of the pr estigious Debates in Indian History and Society series, this volume will be useful for students, scholars and teachers of medieval and early modern India, as well as those interested in religious studies, comparative religion, sociology, and anthropology.
About the Author
David N. Lorenzen, Professor of South Asian History, Centre of Asian and African Studies, El Colegio de Mexico
David N. Lorenzen
Table of contents
General Editors' Preface
Introduction
Alvars and Nayanars
Conversion to Islam
Rama and the Muslims
Kabir and the Sants
Historical Overviews
Index
Notes on Contributors
David N. Lorenzen
Description
It provides a picture, fascinating...of some of the religious movements in Indian history.' - The book Review
This book addresses a range of debates regarding religious movements in the medieval and early modern periods. Eleven key essays debate the linkages between the religious and worldly aims of different movements and the continuity and change in their ideologies, social bases, and organizational structures over time. They present divergent views on important issues such as the relationship between caste and the sect, the idea of renunciation, the role of the Sufis in the conversion to Islam in medieval India, and the ways in which many South Asian popular movements emerged and gathered force.
In an insightful introduction by David Lorenzen, each debate is discussed in its historical and theoretical context. The influence of Dumont, Engels, and Weber on our understanding of the nature of religious movemtns in and beyond the South Asia is also analysed. Part of the pr estigious Debates in Indian History and Society series, this volume will be useful for students, scholars and teachers of medieval and early modern India, as well as those interested in religious studies, comparative religion, sociology, and anthropology.
About the Author
David N. Lorenzen, Professor of South Asian History, Centre of Asian and African Studies, El Colegio de Mexico
Table of contents
General Editors' Preface
Introduction
Alvars and Nayanars
Conversion to Islam
Rama and the Muslims
Kabir and the Sants
Historical Overviews
Index
Notes on Contributors
The Crisis of Empire in Mughal North India
Muzaffar Alam
Rethinking Early Medieval India
Upinder Singh
The Life and Times of Shaikh Nizam-U’D-Din Auliya
(Late) K. A. Nizami
Religion, State, and Society in Medieval India
S. Nurul Hasan, Satish Chandra
Essays on Medieval Indian History
Satish Chandra


