Critical Humanities from India

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Alexander III
Ananya Vajpeyi
Ashis Nandy
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Bhakti Traditions
Bimal Krishna Matilal
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Caste Discrimination
Caste Provision
Caste System
caste system analysis
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classroom
Colonial Consciousness
context
Critical Humanities
cultural diversity theory
culture
Digital Fibres
Dilip da Cunha
disciplinary boundaries
Disciplinary Decadence
Dispassionate Pursuit
Dunkin Jalki
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European Episteme
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Hindu Muslim Antagonism
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Indian Classroom
Indian Intellectual Traditions
Indian Traditions
Intellectual Parasitism
Kailash Baral
Lively Archives
Makarand Paranjape
muslim
Nationalist Problematization
non-European humanism research
Parasitic Structures
planetary coexistence studies
postcolonial humanities
Prakash Shah
S. N. Balagangadhara
secularism in education
Shashikala Srinivasan
South South Dialogue
Sufiya Pathan
system
Tamil Nadu
traditions
Vice Versa
Vivek Dhareshwar
Water Falls

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138743045
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Mar 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The field of humanities generates a discourse that traditionally addressed the questions of what is proper to man, rights of man, crimes against humanity, human creativity and action, human reflection and performance, human utterance and artefact. The university as a philosophical-political institution transmits this humanist account. This European humanistic legacy, which is little more than Christian anthropology, barely received any questioning from cultures that faced colonialism. In such a context, this volume attempts to unravel the ‘barely secularized heritage’ of Europe (Derrida’s phrase) and its fatal consequences in other cultures. The task of Critical Humanities is to explore the ways in which the question of being human (along with non-human others) today from heterogeneous cultural ‘backgrounds’ can be undertaken. The future of the humanities teaching and research is contingent upon the risky task of configuring cultural difference from non-European locations. Such a task is inescapable and urgently needed when tectonic cultural upheavals have begun to show devastating effect on planetary coexistence today. It is precisely in such a context that this collection of essays on critical humanities affirms, ‘without alibi’, the urgency of collective reflection and innovative research across the traditional disciplinary and institutional borders and communication systems on the one hand and Asian, African and European cultural formations on the other. Critical Humanities are at one level little more than communities on the verge (critical) but whose centuries long survival and resilient creations of cultural (and /as natural) habitats are of deeply enduring significance to affirm the biocultural diversities of living that compose the planet.

Topical and timely, this book will be useful to scholars, researchers and teachers of cultural theory, literary studies, philosophy, cultural geography, legal studies, sociology, history, performance studies, environmental studies, caste and communalism studies, postcolonial theory, India studies, and education.

D. Venkat Rao is Professor of English Literature, School of English Literary Studies, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad, India. In addition to books in English and Telugu, he has published several articles in national and international journals. His recent work is Cultures of Memory in South Asia (2014). His other publications include In Citations: Readings in Area Studies of Culture (1999), a translation of Ashis Nandy’s The Intimate Enemy into Telugu. He has also translated into English, a Telugu intellectual autobiography entitled The Last Brahmin (2012). He has co-edited Reflections on Literature, Criticism and Theory (2004) and an anthology of essays on U. R. Ananthamurthy’s Samskara. His interests include literary and cultural studies, image studies, comparative thought, translation, and mnemocultures. He has designed several courses interfacing culture, technology, and literary studies.