Hindu Kingship and Polity in Precolonial India

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Cambridge University Press, 2003 - 190 pages
Through the analysis of eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century texts on the Hindu Kingdom of Kota in Rajasthan, in this 2003 book Norbert Peabody explores the ways in which historical consciousness, or memory, is culturally constructed and how this consciousness informs social experience. By building on the premise that no society receives the past in a transparent, universal and objective way, he unravels how the past in Kota has been fashioned. His analysis demonstrates how different styles of historical interpretation sustain different regimes, and how specific varieties of social and political activity are founded upon these different perceptions of the past. In this way, he suggests that different societies not only establish different co-ordinates of value in their constructions of the past, but also that the very processes of social and political transformation differ from society to society. This is a fascinating and challenging book which promises to become a classic in the field.
 

Contents

Karmic kingship
15
Kings saints
50
Military fiscalism and the cultural economy of devotion
80
From royal service to maternal devotion during the Jhala
112
Hindu
147
Beyond orientalism
168
Index
186
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About the author (2003)

Norbert Peabody is a Graduate Officer in Research at the Centre of South Asian Studies, University of Cambridge.

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