scholarly journals Attewell, Guy: Refiguring Unani Tibb. Plural Healing in Late Colonial India, New Delhi, Orient Longman, 2007. XVI, 316 p. (New Perspectives in South Asian History). £ 26.95. ISBN 978-81-250-3017-1

Gesnerus ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-108
Author(s):  
Anne Marie Moulin
2007 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 130-147
Author(s):  
John Roosa

Abstract This essay evaluates the changing research agendas of Subaltern Studies, an influential series of books on South Asian history that began in 1982. The essay criticizes the original research agenda as articulated by the series editor, Ranajit Guha, and the subsequent agenda proposed by several members of the Subaltern Studies collective. Guha initially proposed that studies of colonial India understand power in terms of unmediated relationships between “the elite” and “the subaltern” and endeavour to answer a counterfactual question on why the “Indian elite” did not come to represent the nation. The subsequent agenda first formulated in the late 1980s, while jettisoning Guha’s strict binaries and crude populism, has not led to any new insights into South Asian history. The turn towards the issues of modernity and postcolonialism has resulted in much commentary on what is already known. Some members of the collective, in the name of uncovering a distinctly “Indian modernity” and moving beyond Western categories, have reified the concept of modernity and restaged tired old debates within Western social theory.


2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 409-414
Author(s):  
ANNE MURPHY ◽  
HEIDI PAUWELS

In an unprecedented show of efficiency, workers of the New Delhi Municipal Corporation worked overnight on September 3, 2015 to change signposts of Aurangzeb Road to A. B. J. Abdul Kalam Road. This renaming had been decided on roughly a week earlier, prompted by a proposal from Members of Parliament from the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party). The move proved popular, but was followed by a degree of soul-searching in the Indian press about whether Aurangzeb's image as a villain is justified. Discussion of the figure of Aurangzeb in South Asian history has not abated since then, with scholars intervening in the debate. The popular reaction to such interventions has been equally contentious, with vituperative web-based responses too numerous to cite.


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