The Hindi Public Sphere 1920-1940
Language and Literature in the Age of Nationalism
Price: 695.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198062202
Publication date:
29/04/2009
Paperback
500 pages
216x140mm
Price: 695.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198062202
Publication date:
29/04/2009
Paperback
500 pages
Part of Oxford India Paperbacks
Francesca Orsini
To a colonized people agitating for freedom, a people divided by many languages, cultures and religions, the one language--one nation concept of nationalism proved to be both powerful and seductive. In polyphonic India, however, such a single 'national' language had to be created, its power established. Most nineteenth-century Hindi intellectuals believed the chosen language to be the 'Hindu' Hindi, not the 'Islamic' Hindustani or Urdu nor any other prominent language like Bengali.
Rights: World Rights
Francesca Orsini
Description
This book analyses how a language became the instrument with which the contours of a new nation were traced. To a colonized people agitating for freedom, a people divided by many languages, cultures and religions, the one language--one nation concept of nationalism proved to be both powerful and seductive. In polyphonic India, however, such a single 'national' language had to be created, its power established. Most nineteenth-century Hindi intellectuals believed the chosen language to be the 'Hindu' Hindi, not the 'Islamic' Hindustani or Urdu nor any other prominent language like Bengali.
Orsini shows how early twentieth-century discourses on language, literature, women, history, and politics form the core of the Hindi culture that exist today. She also recovers the many voices, written out of history, which were critical to the national Hindi project. With its depth and scope of research and thinking, this book will be crucial for any scholar engaging in the issues of nationalism, religion, language, and literature that Orsini so ably weaves together and scrutinizes here.
About the author
Francesca Orsini is Professor emerita of Hindi and South Asian Literature at SOAS, University of London. Her research spans modern and contemporary Hindi literature, cultural history, popular literature and the history of the book, and multi-lingual literary history.
Francesca Orsini
Description
This book analyses how a language became the instrument with which the contours of a new nation were traced. To a colonized people agitating for freedom, a people divided by many languages, cultures and religions, the one language--one nation concept of nationalism proved to be both powerful and seductive. In polyphonic India, however, such a single 'national' language had to be created, its power established. Most nineteenth-century Hindi intellectuals believed the chosen language to be the 'Hindu' Hindi, not the 'Islamic' Hindustani or Urdu nor any other prominent language like Bengali.
Orsini shows how early twentieth-century discourses on language, literature, women, history, and politics form the core of the Hindi culture that exist today. She also recovers the many voices, written out of history, which were critical to the national Hindi project. With its depth and scope of research and thinking, this book will be crucial for any scholar engaging in the issues of nationalism, religion, language, and literature that Orsini so ably weaves together and scrutinizes here.
About the author
Francesca Orsini is Professor emerita of Hindi and South Asian Literature at SOAS, University of London. Her research spans modern and contemporary Hindi literature, cultural history, popular literature and the history of the book, and multi-lingual literary history.
Cultural Contours of North-East India
Birendranath Datta
Literary Cultures in Early Modern North India
Imre Bangha and Danuta Stasik


