Author: Hermann KulkePublisher: Oxford University PressYear: 1997/2004Language: EnglishPages: 367ISBN/UPC (if available): 0195642678
Description
This volume outlines and expands all the major discourses on India's various state forms, and will be of interest to every scholar of ancient, medieval and modern India..Since the 1940s, reevaluations of the nature of the State have been a major occupation among historians worldwide. There has been a debate on the extent to which the State is independent of the interests of the ruling class. Sociologists and anthropologists interested in this issue have investigated State-formation, the relationship between kinship and pre-modern States, and the relation of State power with religious practices..Pre-colonial India provides a unique testing ground for such debates, for it provides examples of State forms which vary enormously. Yet serious consideration of the nature of State forms in India was often overwhelmed by a focus on 'caste' and 'brahminism'. Now however, as Professor Kulke demonstrates in his introduction to this book - which consists of all the major essays on this important theme - several basic forms of the State can be isolated. .Although the notion of 'centralized empire' still dominates the historiography, alternative models such as 'the segmentary state' and the 'patrimonial state' have given rise to productive debates.
Contents
General Editors' PrefaceAcknowledgementsCHAPTER IIntroduction : The Study of the State In Pre-modern India CHAPTER IIHow Feudal was Indian Feudalism? (revised and updated, 1992)CHAPTER IIIWas There Feudalism in Indian History?CHAPTER IVThe Segmentary State : Interim ReflectionsCHAPTER VState formations in South India, 850 - 1280CHAPTER VIPolitical Processes and the Structure of Polity in Early Medieval IndiaCHAPTER VIIThe Early and the Imperial Kingdom : A Processural Model of Integrative State Formation in Early Medieval IndiaCHAPTER IXTowards an Interpretation of the Mughal EmpireCHAPTER XThe Patrimonial-Bureaucratic Empire of the MughalsCHAPTER XIState Formation and Rajput Myth in Tribal Central IndiaAnnotated BibliographySelect Bibliography (compiled by Georg Berkemer)