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India is changing at a rapid pace as it continues to move from its
colonial past to its globalised future. This Companion offers a
framework for understanding that change, and how modern cultural
forms have emerged out of very different histories and traditions.
The book provides accounts of literature, theatre, film, modern and
popular art, music, television and food; it also explores in detail
social divisions, customs, communications and daily life. In a
series of engaging, erudite and occasionally moving essays the
contributors, drawn from a variety of disciplines, examine not
merely what constitutes modern Indian culture, but just how
wide-ranging are the cultures that persist in the regions of India.
This volume will help the reader understand the continuities and
fissures within Indian culture and some of the conflicts arising
from them. Throughout, what comes to the fore is the extraordinary
richness and diversity of modern Indian culture.
India is changing at a rapid pace as it continues to move from its
colonial past to its globalised future. This Companion offers a
framework for understanding that change, and how modern cultural
forms have emerged out of very different histories and traditions.
The book provides accounts of literature, theatre, film, modern and
popular art, music, television and food; it also explores in detail
social divisions, customs, communications and daily life. In a
series of engaging, erudite and occasionally moving essays the
contributors, drawn from a variety of disciplines, examine not
merely what constitutes modern Indian culture, but just how
wide-ranging are the cultures that persist in the regions of India.
This volume will help the reader understand the continuities and
fissures within Indian culture and some of the conflicts arising
from them. Throughout, what comes to the fore is the extraordinary
richness and diversity of modern Indian culture.
Religions in South Asia have tended to be studied in blocks,
whether in the various monolithic traditions in which they are now
regarded, thus Hindu, Muslim, Buddhist, Sikh, Jain, Christian, or
indeed in temporal blocks: ancient, medieval, modern. This volume
seeks to look at relationships both within and between religions.
It explores the diversity and the multiplicity within each
tradition, the historical links between the various traditions
which have crisscrossed the monoliths, but also the specific forms
of their co-existence with each other, whether in accord or in
antagonism. It views the interaction between 'reformed' and
non-reformed branches within each of the modern monoliths, as for
instance the Arya Samaj and the Sanatani positions within Hinduism.
Its second major concern is to look for grounds shared in the
process of modernizing. Though there has been much research to date
on religious reform movements, there has been less concern with
investigating and analyzing developments across the religious
boundaries that so sharply divide Hinduism, Sikhism, Buddhism and
Islam from each other today, and all of these from Christianity.
And finally, it also looks at the changing social and political
frames of reference shared by both religious and secularist strands
of thought. The 'religions' targeted include Hindu discourses
(Brahmo, Arya, Sanatana, and various traditional formations, the
Aryan/Dravidian divide), Buddhist, Jain, Sikh and Islamic
traditions, and Indian Christianity.
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