Unarchived Histories

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Agriculture
Ancestral Deities
Anthropology
Anticolonial Revolution
archival silences in global history
bengal
Birth Narrative
Black Women's Work
Black Women’s Work
british
Calcutta (Kolkata)
Capitalism
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Child Widow
cial
cials
Civilization
Clan Gods
Class
colonial archives
Colonization
Colony
Colored Creole
creole
Creole Women
Daniel West
Decolonization
Development
Drawing Back
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
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Ethnology
everyday life history
Famine
Fi Remen
Finance
Foucauldian analysis
Gender
Governance
guha
Hutchinson's Life
Hutchinson’s Life
Ideology
Independence
Independent Woman
Independent Woman Artist
Industrialization
Jallianwala Bagh
Jurisprudence
Khari Boli
Killed Man
Late Nineteenth Century Americans
marginalised narratives
Marriage
Military
Normative Political Project
offi
postcolonial studies
presidency
Race
Railways
ranajit
Revolution
Satyamev Jayate
Settlement
Socle Mouvant
Southern Chhattisgarh
subaltern studies
Trace Object
Trade
Transcendental Europe
Unarchived Histories
women

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815373483
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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For some time now, scholars have recognized the archive less as a neutral repository of documents of the past, and rather more as a politically interested representation of it, and recognized that the very act of archiving is accompanied by a process of un-archiving. Michel Foucault pointed to "madness" as describing one limit of reason, history and the archive. This book draws attention to another boundary, marked not by exile, but by the ordinary and everyday, yet trivialized or "trifling." It is the status of being exiled within – by prejudices, procedures, activities and interactions so fundamental as to not even be noticed – that marks the unarchived histories investigated in this volume.

Bringing together contributions covering South Asia, North and South America, and North Africa, this innovative analysis presents novel interpretations of unfamiliar sources and insightful reconsiderations of well-known materials that lie at the centre of many current debates on history and the archive.

Gyanendra Pandey is Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor, and Director of the Interdisciplinary Workshop in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies, at Emory University, USA. He is the author of Routine Violence: Nations, Fragments, Histories (2006) and A History of Prejudice: Race, Caste and Difference in India and the United States (2013), and editor of Subaltern Citizens and their Histories (2010) and Subalternity and Difference (2011), both published in the Routledge series ‘Intersections’.