000 01493nam a22001457a 4500
999 _c525022
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008 240207b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aKaicker, Abhishek
_943064
245 _aFarhat Hasan, paper, performance, and the state: Social change and political culture in Mughal India
260 _aThe Indian Economic and Social History Review
300 _a60(4), Oct-Dec, 2023: p.479-480
520 _aFarhat Hasan, Paper, Performance, and the State: Social Change and Political Culture in Mughal India. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021, xv+155 pp. Perhaps still smarting from Hegel’s dismissal of ‘Hindoo political existence’ as obtaining ‘purely a people, but no state’, for historians of India it has until recently remained a sine qua non to demonstrate the solidity and firmness of the state before colonial rule. The anxieties of post-independence historians about the viability of the national project (to which we might add the fact of their elitism), points out Hasan in the conclusion of the work under review, have led them to focus exclusively on histories which privilege the Mughal state to the exclusion of the society it ruled. Rethinking the nature and place of the state and the arena of its relations with the social world is the object to which this book aspires.- Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/00194646231203726
773 _aThe Indian Economic and Social History Review
906 _aBOOK REVIEW
942 _cAR