Surprising Bedfellows: Hindus and Muslims in Medieval and Early Modern IndiaSushil Mittal Surprising Bedfellows: Hindus and Muslims in Medieval and Early Modern India argues that religious and cultural identities in medieval and early modern India were marked by fluid and constantly shifting relationships rather than by the binary model of opposition that is assumed in so much scholarship. Building on the pioneering work of scholars such as Cynthia Talbot and Brajadulal Chattopadhyaya, these chapters seek to understand identity perception through romances, historical documents, ballads and historical epics, inscriptions and even architecture. The chapters in this volume urge readers to reconsider the simple and rigid application of categories such as Hindu and Muslim when studying South Asia's medieval and early modern past. It is only by doing this that we can understand the past and, perhaps, help prevent the dangerous rewriting of Indian history. |
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Page 2
... dominance , and cultural influence . In their global encounters , they inevitably compared other cultures with their own , and , from their perspective atop the mounting wave of European power , these Westerners more often than not ...
... dominance , and cultural influence . In their global encounters , they inevitably compared other cultures with their own , and , from their perspective atop the mounting wave of European power , these Westerners more often than not ...
Page 6
... dominant Western herme- neutic of cultural interpretation . Phillip Wagoner's description of a building constructed using Indic style and serving Muslim ritual needs demonstrates both a convergence of cultural patterns and insufficiency ...
... dominant Western herme- neutic of cultural interpretation . Phillip Wagoner's description of a building constructed using Indic style and serving Muslim ritual needs demonstrates both a convergence of cultural patterns and insufficiency ...
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action Adil Shah Afzal Aḥmad Khan's Ahmadnagar Ain al-Mulk architectural Āriph Asian Behulā Bengali Bijapur Brāhmaṇas building Burhanpur code switching communities construction contemporary cultural dargah Deccan defined Delhi demonic devotion dharma dharmasāle documents dominant eighteenth century eighteenth-century India elite epigraphic example Firishta grant Hindu and Muslim Hinduism Husayn Ibrāhīm identity ideological imagination India Indic inscription interaction interpretation Islamic Jay Singh Kalikātā Kannada Kavi Khan Khandesh king kingdom Laine Lālmon language literary literature Maharashtra mālinī mandapa Marāṭhā Marathi Masjid medieval military mosque Mughul narrative Nizam pāla pāñcālī patron patronage Persian Pīr Pir's political premodern Rājās Rāma Rāma Rāja religion religious ritual romances rule ruler Śāhaji Sanskrit Satya Pir seventeenth Shāh Śiva Śivabhārata Śivājī Śivaji's social South Asia Stewart story studies suggests Sultāns tale Telugu tradition translation University Press Vaiṣṇava Vijayanagara villages Wagoner warrior wife witch word dharma