Europe`s India words, people, empires, 1500-1800
Material type: TextPublication details: London Harvard University Press 2017Description: xvii, 394 p. illustrations maps 25 cmISBN:- 9780674972261
- 303.48240540903 23 SU-E
- DS446 .S78 2017
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 303.48240540903 SU-E (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 136457 |
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303.482401767 MA-E Europe`s encounter with islam the secular and the postsecular | 303.482401767 MA-E Europe`s encounter with Islam the secular and the postsecular | 303.482405 EU- Europe and Asia regions in flux | 303.48240540903 SU-E Europe`s India words, people, empires, 1500-1800 | 303.482406 RO-M Matriarchy, patriarchy, and imperial security in Africa explaining riots in Europe and violence in Africa | 303.4824205409034 DO-O Orientalism, empire, and national culture India, 1770-1880 | 303.4824305 DE- Deploying orientalism in culture and history from Germany to Central and Eastern Europe |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction: Before and beyond "orientalism" -- On the Indo-Portuguese moment -- The question of "Indian religion" -- Of co-production: the case of James Fraser, 1730-50 -- The transition to colonial knowledge -- By way of conclusion: India's Europe.
Europe's India tracks the changing place of India in the European imagination over three centuries, by looking closely at a varied cast of actors and sites of interaction, from ports and coastal enclaves to inland courts. The opening of the Cape Route by Vasco da Gama in 1498 created a new set of conditions for dealings between Europe and India (and Asia more generally). In the decades that followed, many different Europeans - traders, military men, missionaries and others - came to India, and produced a set of images regarding the sub-continent that left a deep imprint on the European imagination. Initially, the Europeans were relatively minor actors on the fringes of India, but over time they came to occupy a situation of power, especially after about 1750. The particular strength of this book is its close examination of a number of individual agents, acting both within the European empires, and at their fringes. Though the central axis is that between Europe and India, this is equally a larger exercise in a global and connected history of the early modern world.--
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