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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 3 November 2011
- ISBN 9780199765928
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages368 pages
- Size 160x236x30 mm
- Weight 618 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
This in-depth study of the classical Hindi tradition brings Mughal-period court culture alive for an English readership. Busch draws on diverse perspectives from literary, social, and intellectual history and brings a major precolonial archive into dialogue with postcolonial theory.
MoreLong description:
This in-depth study of the classical Hindi tradition brings the world of Mughal-era poetry and court culture alive for an English readership. Allison Busch draws on the perspectives of literary, social, and intellectual history to elucidate one of premodern India's most significant textual traditions, documenting the dramatic rise of a new type of professional Hindi writer while providing critical insight into the motives that animated this literary community and its patrons.
Busch examines how riti literature served as an important aesthetic and political resource in the richly multicultural world of Mughal India, and provides, for the first time in a Western language, a detailed study of the fascinating oeuvre of Keshavdas, whose seminal Rasikpriya (Handbook for poetry connoisseurs, 1591) was the catalyst for a new Hindi classicism that attracted a spectacular following in the leading courts of early modern India. The circulation of Hindi literature among diverse communities during this period is testament to a remarkable pluralism that cannot be understood in terms of the nationalist logic that has constrained modern Hindi and Urdu to be "Hindu" and "Muslim" languages since the nineteenth century. With the cultural reforms ushered in by colonialism, north Indians repudiated the classical traditions of the courtly past, a complex process given extended treatment in the final chapter.
Busch provides valuable insight into more than two centuries of Hindi courtly culture. Poetry of Kings also showcases the importance of bringing precolonial archives into dialogue with current debates of postcolonial theory.
Informed by a very keen literary sensibility. ... There is a great deal in these chapters which will appeal to all sorts of students of the period ... This is without a doubt one of the most stimulating and enjoyable books to have appeared for quite a while in the field of pre-modern Indian literary and cultural studies.
Table of Contents:
Note on Transliteration and other Textual Conventions
Introduction: A Forgetting of Things Past
Chapter 1. Keshavdas of Orchha
Chapter 2. The Aesthetic World of Riti Poetry
Chapter 3. Riti Intellectuals
Chapter 4. Riti Literature at the Mughal Court
Chapter 5. Riti Literature in Greater Hindustan
Chapter 6. The Fate of Riti Literature in Colonial India
Conclusion
Glossary
Bibliography