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India and Pakistan (Inventing the Nation)
Book Details
Author(s)Ian Talbot
PublisherBloomsbury USA
ISBN / ASIN0340706333
ISBN-139780340706336
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,984,151
CategoryHistory
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This first volume in the series looks at a region that is all too often viewed through the prism of European experience, India and Pakistan. Ian Talbot provides a wide-ranging study of nationalism in a non-European context, showing how the 'invention' of modern India and Pakistan drew heavily for inspiration on indigenous values.
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Analyzing both the effects of colonial rule and the post-colonial aftermath, the book is a readable and up-to-date introduction to the major issues in the contemporary history of the sub-continent and an examination of a recent trend in historical writing to emphasize the extent to which nations are made, not born. The book explores whether the forging of the nation is a matter of conscious manipulation by an elite or guided by more popular imperatives or a combination of the two. Â
Ian Talbot is Reader in South Asian Studies and Director for the Centre for South Asian Studies at Coventry University.
This first volume in the series looks at a region that is all too often viewed through the prism of European experience, India and Pakistan. Ian Talbot provides a wide-ranging study of nationalism in a non-European context, showing how the 'invention' of modern India and Pakistan drew heavily for inspiration on indigenous values.
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Analyzing both the effects of colonial rule and the post-colonial aftermath, the book is a readable and up-to-date introduction to the major issues in the contemporary history of the sub-continent and an examination of a recent trend in historical writing to emphasize the extent to which nations are made, not born. The book explores whether the forging of the nation is a matter of conscious manipulation by an elite or guided by more popular imperatives or a combination of the two. Â
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"A pithy commentary on the formation of modern national identities in the subcontinent."—Commonwealth and Comparative Politics
"A thoughtful and up-to-date account that will be of great value to all those interested in the history of nationalism in South Asia."—English Historical Review
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"A pithy commentary on the formation of modern national identities in the subcontinent."—Commonwealth and Comparative Politics

















