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Composite culture censusoperations and communal consciousness in the colonial Punjab

By: Singh, Jasbir.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Punjab University: Research Journal Social Sciences Description: 28(1,2 &3), 2020: p.1-30.Subject(s): Pre-colonial Punjab, Composite culture, Religious coexistence, Cultural traditions, Folk civilization, Social fluidity, Syncretic practices, Shared customs, Diffused identities, Interfaith harmony, Regional pluralism, Indigenous heritage, Cultural integration, Non-exclusive religiosity, Punjabi folklore, Community bonds, Oral traditions, Social cohesion, Pre-modern India, Cultural resilience In: Research Journal Social SciencesSummary: Pre-colonial Punjab had been an abode of composite culture where diverse religious and culture traditions co-existed and flushed for centuries tougher. The people of the region were living in a highly diffused world where the religious exclusiveness was hardly practiced. It was a folk civilsation which manifested itself through he shared cultural practices and social fluidity. – Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
28(1,2 &3), 2020: p.1-30 Available AR132643

Pre-colonial Punjab had been an abode of composite culture where diverse religious and culture traditions co-existed and flushed for centuries tougher. The people of the region were living in a highly diffused world where the religious exclusiveness was hardly practiced. It was a folk civilsation which manifested itself through he shared cultural practices and social fluidity. – Reproduced

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