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Scoring Off the Field: Foot… Literacy and Orality in Eig…

Colonialism, Orientalism and the Dravidian Languages

Author Venkateswarlu, K.
Publisher Routledge India
Category History
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Book Details
ISBN / ASIN1138662372
ISBN-139781138662377
AvailabilityIn Stock.
Sales Rank99,999,999
CategoryHistory
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

The Dravidian language family is marked historically by a protracted struggle between Tamil and its aggressively assertive supremacy, and the consequent peripheralizing of other majoritarian languages of the region. This book looks at the development of Telugu ― with its unique grammatical and lexical tradition as instrumental in the construction of the concept of the Dravidian language family in 1816, and in the development of comparative linguistics since that time.

The author’s arguments locate Telugu in multiple matrices: of historical and theoretical Orientalism; the colonial state’s interest in native languages; the politics of state patronage; questions of cultural assimilation and divergence; the overbearing presence of Tamil and its literary traditions; and the related inter- and intra-civilizational dialogues. The book thus grapples with the tortured emergence of Telugu ― a product of the dynamics of Andhra society, economy, polity and culture influenced and driven by Muslim, Hindu and Western influence.

With its richly textured narrative, this book will be of interest to those in the fields of history, sociology, socio-linguistics, colonial studies, and literature, apart from the generally interested reader.

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