000 04234cam a2200361 a 4500
001 17228537
005 20130913114713.0
008 120327s2012 enka b 001 0 eng
010 _a 2012012071
020 _a9781107619128
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
042 _apcc
043 _aa-ii---
050 0 0 _aDS461
_b.M47 2012
082 0 0 _223
_a954
_bMET
100 1 _aMetcalf, Barbara Daly,
_d1941-
245 1 2 _aA concise history of modern India /
_cby Barbara Metcalf D, Thomas Metcalf R.
250 _a3rd ed.
260 _aCambridge [England] ;
_aNew York :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2012.
300 _axxxiv, 326 p. :
_bill. ;
_c25 cm.
_ePB
490 0 _aCambridge concise histories
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 8 _aMachine generated contents note: 1. Sultans, Mughals, and pre-colonial Indian society; 2. Mughal twilight: the emergence of regional states and the East India Company; 3. The East India Company Raj, 1772-1850; 4. Revolt, the modern state, and colonized subjects, 1848-1885; 5. Civil society, colonial constraints, 1885-1919; 6. The crisis of the colonial order, 1919-1939; 7. The 1940s: triumph and tragedy; 8. Congress Raj: democracy and development, 1950-1989; 9. Democratic India at the turn of the Millenium: prosperity, poverty, power.
520 _a"A Concise History of Modern India, by Barbara D. Metcalf and Thomas R. Metcalf, has become a classic in the field since it was first published in 2001. As a fresh interpretation of Indian history from the Mughals to the present, it has informed students across the world. In the third edition of the book, a final chapter charts the dramatic developments of the last twenty years, from 1990 through the Congress electoral victory of 2009, to the rise of the Indian high-tech industry in a country still troubled by poverty and political unrest. The narrative focuses on the fundamentally political theme of the imaginative and institutional structures that have successively sustained and transformed India, first under British colonial rule and then, after 1947, as an independent country. Woven into the larger political narrative is an account of India's social and economic development, and its rich cultural life. Throughout, the authors argue that despite a powerful historiographical tradition to the contrary, no enduring meaning can be given to categories such as 'caste', 'Hindu', 'Muslim', or even 'India'"--
520 _a"This is a concise history of India since the time of the Mughals. It comprises the history of what was known as British India from the late eighteenth century until 1947, when the subcontinent was split into the two independent countries of India and Pakistan, and of the Republic of India thereafter. (The history of Pakistan, and after 1971, of Bangladesh, is taken up in a separate volume in this series.) In this work we hope to capture something of the excitement that has characterized the field of India studies in recent decades. Any history written today differs markedly from that of the late 1950s and early 1960s when we, as graduate students, first 'discovered' India. The history of India, like histories everywhere, is now at its best written as a more inclusive story, and one with fewer determining narratives. Not only do historians seek to include more of the population in their histories - women, minorities, the dispossessed - but they are also interested in alternative historical narratives, those shaped by distinctive cosmologies or by local experiences. Historians question, above all, the historical narratives that were forged - as they were everywhere in the modern world - by the compelling visions of nationalism"--
650 7 _aHISTORY / Asia / India & South Asia.
_2bisacsh
_93970
651 0 _aIndia
_xHistory.
700 1 _aMetcalf, Thomas R.,
_d1934-
_91909
906 _a7
_bcbc
_corignew
_d1
_eecip
_f20
_gy-gencatlg
942 _2ddc
_cREF
952 _3PB
_p00017991
_40
_eIntact book house (P) Ltd : BANG/2013/CRB/359 ; 13/08/2013.
_00
_bCJC
_10
_o954 MET
_d2013-09-13
_8REF
_70
_cHIS
_2ddc
_g495.00
_yREF
_aCJC
999 _c30646
_d30646