Abstract
Acknowledgements Notes on translations and area under study, with map Part I. Introduction: 1. Low caste protest in nineteenth-century western India Part II. Religion and Society Under Early British Rule: 2. From warrior traditions to nineteenth-century politics: structure, ideology, and identity in the Maratha-kunbi caste complex 3. The crisis of cultural legitimacy: missionaries, reformers, and Hindu society in the mid-nineteenth century 4. The growth of religious reform opinion in western India Part III. Jotirao Phule and his circle: the emergence of a distinctive radical voice: 5. Student radicals in mid-nineteenth-century Maharashtra 6. The Aryan invasions and the origins of caste society 7. Warriors and cultivators: the reinterpretation of popular culture 8. Maratha history as polemic: low caste ideology and political debate in late nineteenth-century Maharashtra Part IV. The Lower Caste Community in Contemporary Society: 9. Religious emancipation and political competition 10. Social protest and the construction of a religious ethic 11. Traditional privileges and new skills: Phule's analysis of the nature of Brahman power 12. The Satyashodhak Samaj in the 1870s Part V. Ideology and the Non-Brahman Movement in the 1880s: 13. Phule's polemic in the 1880s: the ideological construction of rural life and labour 14. The non-Brahman movement in the 1880s 15. Epilogue: ideology and politics in nineteenth-century western India Bibliographic note Bibliography Glossary Index.
Highlights
Title Caste, Conflict, and Ideology: Mahatma Jotirao Phule and Low Caste Protest in NineteenthCentury Western India
Powered by the California Digital Library University of California concludes that most Japanese in the late Meiji era viewed the emperor less as the focus of absolute loyalty than as a symbol of national unity, military success, and the country's rapid modernization
Gluck is less persuasive in the last pages, in which she briefly explores the significance of late Meiji ideology for the succeeding eras of "Taisho democracy" (191Os and 1920s) and authoritarianism (1931-45)
Summary
Title Caste, Conflict, and Ideology: Mahatma Jotirao Phule and Low Caste Protest in NineteenthCentury Western India. The use of popular songs and descriptions of New Year's games (for example, the contest to be state officials) makes this one of the first Western studies of modern Japan to bridge the gap between high and low culture. Gluck is less persuasive in the last pages, in which she briefly explores the significance of late Meiji ideology for the succeeding eras of "Taisho democracy" (191Os and 1920s) and authoritarianism (1931-45).
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