Nayanjot Lahiri's new book ...
"As a teacher of Indian history I am all too aware of the squabbles
that the periodization of Indian history has spawned ... I hope, however, that the elasticity in my use of the label ‘ancient’
is of little consequence since I am not concerned with monuments and artefacts
only as a kind of archive of ancient human activity. Instead, I investigate
aspects that relate to the modern histories of these architectural and
archaeological relics. So these essays all connect with the modern pasts of
premodern sites and objects, analysing the many ways in which the conceptions, contradictions,
and conflicts of modern India came to mark their documentation
and conservation." -- from the Introduction
...
Archaeologists
find unexpected things during their digs—as does Lahiri. By unearthing new
archival material and by looking at the ways in which the personal and the
professional mix in their writings, she gives us new facets of two iconic
scholars of ancient India, the archaeologist John Marshall and the historian
D.D. Kosambi. Both are crucial figures: Marshall headed the group that
discovered the Indus civilization; Kosambi changed the way in which ancient
Indian history was written after Independence. Lahiri gives us pictures of them
that no one else has.
Scholarly,
perceptive, and entertaining, Marshalling
the Past offers readings of ancient India and its modern histories that
will confirm Nayanjot Lahiri’s reputation as one of the most readable
historians of her generation.
Nayanjot Lahiri is a professor at the Department of History, University of Delhi—where she was once a
graduate and now teaches archaeology. An undergraduate of St Stephen’s College,
Delhi, she has taught at Hindu College (1982–93) and written several
books, including Pre-Ahom Assam (1991), The Archaeology of Indian Trade Routes (1992), The Decline and
Fall of the Indus Civilization (edited; 2000), and Finding Forgotten Cities (2005).
...
Hardback / 462pp + c.50 b-w illustrations/ Rs 895 / ISBN 81-7824-348-2 /
World rights / October 2012
Comments