For more than fifty years, students and teachers have made the two-volume resource Sources of Indian Traditions their top pick for an accessible yet thorough introduction to Indian and South Asian civilizations. Volume 2 contains an essential selection of primary readings on the social, intellectual, and religious history of India from the decline of Mughal rule in the eighteenth century to today. It details the advent of the East India Company, British colonization, the struggle for liberation, the partition of 1947, and the creation of Pakistan, Bangladesh, and contemporary India.
This third edition now begins earlier than the first and second, featuring a new chapter on eighteenth-century intellectual and religious trends that set the stage for India’s modern development. The editors have added material on Gandhi and his reception both nationally and abroad and include different perspectives on and approaches to Partition and its aftermath. They expand their portrait of post-1947 India and Pakistan and add perspectives on Bangladesh. The collection continues to be divided thematically, with a section devoted to the drafting of the Indian constitution, the rise of nationalism, the influence of Western thought, the conflict in Kashmir, nuclear proliferation, minority religions, secularism, and the role of the Indian political left. A phenomenal text, Sources of Indian Traditions is more indispensable than ever for courses in philosophy, religion, literature, and intellectual and cultural history.
Daftar Isi
Preface to the Third Edition
Acknowledgments
A Note on Transliteration
Chronology
Thematic Table of Contents
Map
1. The Eighteenth Century: Ferment and Change
2. The Early to Mid Nineteenth Century: Debates Over Reform and Challenge to Empire
3. The Later Nineteenth Century: Leaders of Reform and Revival
4. Liberal Social and Political Thought in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century: The Moderates
5. Radical Politics and Cultural Criticism, 1880–1914: The Extremists
6. Mahatma Gandhi and Responses
7. To Independence and Partition
8. Issues in Post-Independence India
9. Pakistan, 1947–2007: The Struggle for National Identity
10. Bangladesh: Independence and Controversies Over the Fruits of Freedom
Notes
Bibliography
Credits
Index
Tentang Penulis
Frances Pritchett (Ph D, South Asian Languages and Civilizations, Chicago)is Professor Emerita of South Asian Literature and Modern Indic Languages, MESAAS, Columbia University. She is thew author of Nets of Awareness: Urdu Poetry and its Critics (California, 1994), the translator of Ghalib: Selected Poems and Letters (Columbia, 2017) and The Romance Tradition in Urdu (Columbia, 1991), and the coeditor of Sources of Indian Traditions: Modern India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh (3/e, Columbia, 2014), among other works.