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Forms of Knowledge in Early Modern Asia
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction / Sheldon Pollock 1
Part I. Communication, Knowledge, and Power
1. The Languages of Science in Early Modern India / Sheldon Pollock 19
2. Bad Language and Good Language: Lexical Awareness in the Cultural Politics of Peninsular India, ca. 1300–1800 / Sumit Guha 49
3. A New Imperial Idiom in the Sixteenth Century: Krishnadevaraya and His Political Theory of Vijayanagara / Velcheru Narayana Rao, David Shulman, and Sanjay Subrahmanyam 69
Part II. Literary Consciousness, Practices, and Institutions in North India
4. The Anxiety of Innovation: The Practice of Literary Science in the Hindi Riti Tradition / Allison Busch 115
5. Writing Devotion: The Dynamics of Textual Transmission n the Kavitavali of Tulsidas / Imre Bangha 140
6. The Teaching of Braj, Gujarati, and Bardi Poetry at the Court of Kutch: The Bhuj Brajbhasa Pathsala (1749–1948) / Françoise Mallison 171
Part III. Inside the World of Indo-Persian Thought
7. The Making of a Munshi / Muzaffar Alam and Sanjay Subrahmanyam 185
8. Pages from the Book of Religions: Encountering Difference in Mughal India / Aditya Behl 210
9. "If There Is a Paradise on Earth, It Is Here": Urban Ethnography in Indo-Persian Poetic and Historical Texts / Sunil Sharma 240
10. Early Persianate Modernity / Mohamad Tavakoli-Targhi 257
Part IV. Early Modernities of Tibetan Knowledge
11. New Scholarship in Tibet, 1650–1700 / Kurtis R. Schaeffer 291
12. Experience, Empiricism, and the Fortunes of Authority: Tibetan Medicine and Buddhism on the Eve of Modernity / Janet Gyatso 311
13. Just Where on Jambudvipa Are We? New Geographical Knowledge and Old Cosmological Schemes in Eighteenth-century Tibet / Matthew T. Kapstein 336
Contributors 365
Index 369

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Essays addressing the ways thinkers in India and Tibet responded to a rapidly changing world in the three centuries prior to 1800

About the Author

Sheldon Pollock is the William B. Ransford Professor of Sanskrit and Indian Studies in the Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies at Columbia University. He is the author of The Language of the Gods in the World of Men: Sanskrit, Culture, and Power in Premodern India; the editor of a number of books, including Literary Cultures in History: Reconstructions from South Asia; and a co-editor of Cosmopolitanism, also published by Duke University Press.

Reviews

"Deserving of our attention in their own right as splendid scholarly contributions to the growing field of early-modern studies in South Asia and Tibet, the essays collected in this volume have the additional merit of addressing, often consciously, the fallacious but widespread tendency on the part of many to pronounce on colonial knowledge or modernity in the subcontinent without much engagement with what preceded them. Students of both pre-colonial and colonial South Asia will benefit from this volume." Dipesh Chakrabarty, author of Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference "Cultural and postcolonial studies scholars conceptualize colonial power as overwhelmingly domineering, paying little attention to the complex changes underway in South Asia before British imperial domination. This creates a great substantive gap, which Forms of Knowledge in Early Modern Asia begins to fill. This collection of excellent essays is a major addition to the literature on early modern Asia." David Ludden, author of Early Capitalism and Local History in South India

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