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Greater India And The Indian Expansionist Imagination C 18851965 The Rise And Decline Of The Idea Of A Lost Hindu Empire Jolita Zabarskait

  • SKU: BELL-50961690
Greater India And The Indian Expansionist Imagination C 18851965 The Rise And Decline Of The Idea Of A Lost Hindu Empire Jolita Zabarskait
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Greater India And The Indian Expansionist Imagination C 18851965 The Rise And Decline Of The Idea Of A Lost Hindu Empire Jolita Zabarskait instant download after payment.

Publisher: De Gruyter Oldenbourg
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 1.88 MB
Pages: 441
Author: Jolita Zabarskaitė
ISBN: 9783110986068, 311098606X
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Greater India And The Indian Expansionist Imagination C 18851965 The Rise And Decline Of The Idea Of A Lost Hindu Empire Jolita Zabarskait by Jolita Zabarskaitė 9783110986068, 311098606X instant download after payment.

This book is the first systematic study of the genealogy, discursive structures, and political implications of the concept of ‘Greater India’, implying a Hindu colonization of Southeast Asia, and used by extension to argue for a past Indian greatness as a colonial power, reproducible in the present and future. From the 1880s to the 1960s, protagonists of the Greater India theme attempted to make a case for the importance of an expansionist Indian civilisation in civilizing Southeast Asia. The argument was extended to include Central Asia, Africa, North and South America, and other regions where Indian migrants were to be found. The advocates of this Indocentric and Hindu revivalist approach, with Hindu and Indian often taken to be synonymous, were involved in a quintessentially parochial project, despite its apparently international dimensions: to justify an Indian expansionist imagination that viewed India’s past as a colonizer and civilizer of other lands as a model for the restoration of that past greatness in the future. Zabarskaite shows that the crucial ideologues and elements used for the formation of the construct of Greater India can be traced to the svadeśī movement of the turn of the century, and that Greater India moved easily between the domains of the scholarly and the popular as it sought to establish itself as a form of nationalist self-assertion.

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