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  1. Review article.[author unknown] - 1994 - Semiotica 98 (3-4):341-448.
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  • Between the Many and the One: Anticolonial Federalism and Popular Sovereignty.Nazmul S. Sultan - 2022 - Political Theory 50 (2):247-274.
    Recovering a marginal body of pluralist political thought from early twentieth-century India, this article explores how the question of popular sovereignty shaped the federalist reconfiguration of the anticolonial democratic project. The turn to federalism was facilitated by the Indian reckoning with Hegel in the late nineteenth century, which led to the diagnosis that the universality ascribed to monist sovereignty relies on a “unilinear” theory of development. Through a sustained engagement with British pluralist and American progressive thought, Indian federalist thinkers eventually (...)
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  • Questioning authority: Constructions and deconstructions of hinduism. [REVIEW]Brian K. Smith - 1998 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 2 (3):313-339.
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  • Nationalism as competing masculinities: homophobia as a technology of othering for hetero- and homonationalism.Koen Slootmaeckers - 2019 - Theory and Society 48 (2):239-265.
    How are masculinity and nationalism intertwined? This question has received scant theoretical attention, and existing theories tend to focus on their shared ideals and are embedded in a heteronormative, homophobic, and patriarchal framework. Such views imply a static relationship between the two phenomena and are incompatible with the recent phenomenon of homonationalism and the incorporation of some homosexual bodies within the nation. Addressing this theoretical gap, this article develops a more holistic framework of the relationship between nationalism and masculinity. Drawing (...)
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  • In karna's realm: An ontology of action. [REVIEW]William S. Sax - 2000 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 28 (3):295-324.
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  • Conquering the quarters: Religion and politics in hinduism. [REVIEW]William S. Sax - 2000 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 4 (1):39-60.
    Our understanding of South Asian society and history is sometimes muddled by the rigid distinctions we make between ‘religion’ and ‘politics.’ The resurgent appeal of Hindu nationalism, the involvement of Hindu renouncers in contemporary Indian politics, and the continuing relevance of religious issues to political discourse throughout South Asia, show that such a distinction is of limited utility. In this essay, I have examined the notion of digvijaya in some detail, in an attempt to show that this ‘most important Indian (...)
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  • A message without an audience: Svāmī rāma tīrtha’s ‘practical vedānta’. [REVIEW]Robin Rinehart - 1998 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 2 (2):185-221.
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  • Rewriting the Utilitarian Market: Colonial Law and Custom in mid-Nineteenth-Century British India.Sandra Den Otter - 2001 - The European Legacy 6 (2):177-188.
    (2001). Rewriting the Utilitarian Market: Colonial Law and Custom in mid-Nineteenth-Century British India. The European Legacy: Vol. 6, No. 2, pp. 177-188.
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  • The Orient Strikes Back.Brian Moeran - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (3):77-112.
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  • Apūrvaṃ Pāṇḍityam: On Appayya Dīkṣita’s Singular Life.Christopher Minkowski - 2016 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 44 (1):1-10.
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  • On Gandhi's critique of the state: Sources, contexts, conjunctures*: Karuna mantena.Karuna Mantena - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (3):535-563.
    Gandhi's critique of the modern state was central to his political thinking. It served as a pivotal hinge between Gandhi's anticolonialism and his theory of politics and was given striking institutional form in his vision of decentralized peasant democracy. This essay explores the origins and implications of Gandhian antistatism by situating it within a genealogy of early twentieth-century political pluralism, specifically British and Indian pluralist criticism of state sovereignty and centralization. This essay traces that critique from the imperial sociology of (...)
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  • The rise of "hinduism"; or, how to invent a world religion with only moderate success.Julius J. Lipner - 2006 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 10 (1):91-104.
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  • Between orientalism and nationalism: The learned society and the making of “southeast asia”*: Su Lin Lewis.Su Lin Lewis - 2013 - Modern Intellectual History 10 (2):353-374.
    Departing from the “Orientalist” view of the learned society in South Asia, this paper examines the role of the learned society in Southeast Asia as a site of sociability and intellectual exchange. It traces the emergence of such societies as independent, rather than official, initiatives, from nineteenth-century societies in Singapore to the Siam Society and Burma Research Society in the early twentieth century. Their journals provided pluralist interpretations of the nation, turning from grand histories of kings to new practices of (...)
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  • Orientalist Sociology and the Creation of Colonial Sexualities.Philippa Levine - 2000 - Feminist Review 65 (1):5-21.
    In what Arjun Appadurai has dubbed the ‘colonial imaginary’ issues of femininity, and who possessed it, were of prime importance. An orientalizing sociology sought to distinguish, and indeed to fix, differences between metropolitan and indigenous women as a rhetoric of hierarchy which secured proper and western femininity to white women. One critical route which colonial commentators and authorities took to produce that knowledge was to measure women's proximity to the practice of prostitution, a means which permitted discussion and judgement of (...)
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  • Colorism as Marriage Capital: Cross-Region Marriage Migration in India and Dark-Skinned Migrant Brides.Reena Kukreja - 2021 - Gender and Society 35 (1):85-109.
    This article, based on original research from 57 villages in four provinces from North and East India, sheds light on a hitherto unexplored gendered impact of colorism in facilitating noncustomary cross-region marriage migrations in India. Within socioeconomically marginalized groups from India’s development peripheries, the hegemonic construct of fairness as “capital” conjoins with both regressive patriarchal gender norms governing marriage and female sexuality and the monetization of social relations, through dowry, to foreclose local marriage options for darker-hued women. This dispossession of (...)
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  • The Mad and the Past: Retrospective Diagnosis, Post-Coloniality, Discourse Analysis and the Asylum Archive. [REVIEW]James Mills - 2000 - Journal of Medical Humanities 21 (3):141-158.
    Before attempting to use as a historical source the Lucknow Lunatic Asylum case notes of the British colonial period in India, it is necessary to determine which methodological approach is most viable. The approach of historians, who attempt retrospectively to diagnose the patients of the past from the clinical details of case notes, does not satisfactorily deal with the criticism that data on medical case notes is less a series of objective observations and more a product of the power relations (...)
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  • Empire, invasion, and India’s national epics.Alf Hiltebeitel - 1998 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 2 (3):387-421.
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  • On platial imagination in the sanskrit mahābhārata.James M. Hegarty - 2009 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 13 (2):163-187.
  • Hindus, muslims, and the other in eighteenth-century india.Stewart Gordon - 1999 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 3 (3):221-239.
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  • The Universality of Culture: Reflection, Interaction and the Logic of Identity.Martin Fuchs - 2000 - Thesis Eleven 60 (1):11-22.
    While universalistic assumptions have been undermined by experiences of cultural difference, the notion of culture has been universalized. But it seems that the notion of culture, the way it has prevailed in public discourse as well as in social and cultural studies, has to be seen as the main stumbling block to intercultural dialogue. The article argues for an interactional concept of culture, or interpretation, as also of research and representation. Emphasis has to be put on modes of linkage between (...)
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  • Growing up amid the religion and science affair: A perspective from indology.Thomas B. Ellis - 2012 - Zygon 47 (3):589-607.
    Abstract This article identifies the tropes of “maturity” and “immaturity” in the dialogue between religion and science. On both sides of the aisle, authors charge, either directly or indirectly, that their dissenting interlocutors are not mature enough to see the value of their respective positions. Such accusations have recently emerged in discussions pertaining to Hindu theology, Indology, and science. Those who dismiss the substance dualism of Hindu yoga, according to Jonathan B. Edelmann, evince immaturity. Appeals to Hindu yoga are yet (...)
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  • Rewriting the Utilitarian Market: Colonial Law and Custom in mid-Nineteenth-Century British India.Sandra Den Otter - 2001 - The European Legacy 6 (2):177-188.
    (2001). Rewriting the Utilitarian Market: Colonial Law and Custom in mid-Nineteenth-Century British India. The European Legacy: Vol. 6, No. 2, pp. 177-188.
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  • Looking at eucharist through the lens of pūjā: An exploration in the comparative study of religion. [REVIEW]Paul B. Courtright - 1998 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 2 (3):423-440.
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  • ‘From India’s coral strand’: Reginald Heber and the missionary project. [REVIEW]Geoffrey Cook - 2001 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 5 (2):131-164.
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  • Theosophy and the origins of the indian national congress.Mark Bevir - 2003 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 7 (1-3):99-115.
    No doubt the Western conceptualization of the East generally served to subjugate the Indians to their colonial rulers, but it also provided a set of beliefs to which disgruntled Western occultists and radicals, and also Western-educated Indians, could appeal in order to defend the dignity and worth of Indian religion and society. No doubt the founding theosophists had no intention of promoting political radicalism on the subcontinent, but the discourse they helped to establish provided others with an instrument they could (...)
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  • Greater Advaita Vedānta: The Case of Sundardās.Michael S. Allen - 2020 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 48 (1):49-78.
    To understand the history of Advaita Vedānta and its rise to prominence, we need to devote more attention to what might be termed “Greater Advaita Vedānta,” or Advaita Vedānta as expressed outside the standard canon of Sanskrit philosophical works. Elsewhere I have examined the works of Niścaldās, whose Hindi-language Vicār-sāgar was once referred to by Swami Vivekananda as the most influential book of its day. In this paper, I look back to one of Niścaldās’s major influences: Sundardās, a well-known Hindi (...)
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  • Rules of untouchability in ancient and medieval law books: Householders, competence, and inauspiciousness. [REVIEW]Mikael Aktor - 2002 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 6 (3):243-274.
  • Pride and Prejudice: Orientalism and German Indology. [REVIEW]Vishwa P. Adluri - 2011 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 15 (3):253-292.
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  • Lived religion in a plural society: a resource or liability.Ashok Kaul & Chitaranjan Adhikary - 2014 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 4 (1):89-102.
    Recently there is a renewed academic interest in religion bringing it back on the global political agenda. Religion in the post modern global order is fast emerging as a new organizing principle in the face of multi-polarity, trans-nationality and sweeping pluralisation of peoples. Contrary to the secularist self believe, the modern has failed to take over the tradition including religion. Rather a logical opposite seems to be happening, questioning the very presumptions of the modernity project. The present paper is a (...)
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