
Kashmir's Contested Pasts
Narratives, Sacred Geographies, and the Historical Imagination
Chitralekha Zutshi(Author)
OUP India (Publisher)
Published on 24. July 2014
Book
Hardback
368 pages
978-0-19-945067-1 (ISBN)
Description
Kashmir's Contested Pasts is a longue duree history of the historical imagination in Kashmir. It explores the articulation, within Kashmir's multilingual historical tradition, of the idea of Kashmir and the idea of history in conversation with each other. Contrary to the notion that the Indian subcontinent did not produce histories in the pre-colonial period, the book uncovers the production, circulation, and consumption of a vibrant regional
tradition of historical composition in its textual, oral, and performance forms from the late sixteenth century to the present.
Analysing the deep linkages amongst Sanskrit, Persian, and Kashmiri narratives the book contends that these traditions drew on and informed each other to define Kashmir as a sacred landscape and polity. It argues that within this interconnected narrative tradition, Kashmir was, and continues to be, imagined as far more than simply an embattled territory or a tourist paradise.
History and history writing, the book further illustrates, were defined in multiple ways-as tradition, facts, memories, stories, common sense, and spiritual practice. The book thus offers a historically grounded reflection on the memories, narrative practices, and institutional contexts that have informed imaginings of Kashmir and its past, and explores the challenges posed to these ideas in Kashmiri political culture today.
tradition of historical composition in its textual, oral, and performance forms from the late sixteenth century to the present.
Analysing the deep linkages amongst Sanskrit, Persian, and Kashmiri narratives the book contends that these traditions drew on and informed each other to define Kashmir as a sacred landscape and polity. It argues that within this interconnected narrative tradition, Kashmir was, and continues to be, imagined as far more than simply an embattled territory or a tourist paradise.
History and history writing, the book further illustrates, were defined in multiple ways-as tradition, facts, memories, stories, common sense, and spiritual practice. The book thus offers a historically grounded reflection on the memories, narrative practices, and institutional contexts that have informed imaginings of Kashmir and its past, and explores the challenges posed to these ideas in Kashmiri political culture today.
Reviews / Votes
Chitralekha Zutshi's Kashmir's Contested Pasts is a magisterial survey of Kashmiri historiography over the last several centuries, a history of the writing of histories in Kashmir ... The book ends with excellent chapters on the Kashmiri narrative public and its engagement with performative modes of history and collective memory, followed by a look at contemporary battles over history in Kashmir, a legacy of the growing communalization of Kashmiri identitycharacteristic of the last two centuries * Umair A. Muhajir, H-Net *
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New Delhi
India
Illustrations
5 b/w
Dimensions
Height: 226 mm
Width: 147 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
540 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-945067-1 (9780199450671)
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Schweitzer Classification
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Additional editions

Chitralekha Zutshi
Kashmir's Contested Pasts
Narratives, Sacred Geographies, and the Historical Imagination
Book
09/2018
2nd Edition
OUP India
€15.50
Shipment within 15-20 days
Person
Chitralekha Zutshi is Associate Professor of History at the College of William and Mary, in Williamsburg, Virginia. She specializes in Modern South Asia, with particular interests in Islam in the Indian Subcontinent; interactions between religious identities, regional movements and nationalism in princely and colonial India; commodity and consumer cultures in Britain and colonial India; ideas of history and historiography in pre-colonial and colonial India.
Kashmir's Contested Pasts is her second book.
Kashmir's Contested Pasts is her second book.
Author
Associate Professor of HistoryCollege of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia
Content
List of Illustrations ; Acknowledgements ; Introduction: Paradise on Earth: The Past and Present of History Writing in Kashmir ; 1. Garden of Solomon: Landscape and Sacred Pasts in Kashmir's Sixteenth-Century Persian Narratives ; 2. A Literary Paradise: The Tarikh Tradition in Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century Kashmir ; 3. Vernacular Histories: Narration and Practice in Kashmir's Nineteenth-Century Historiographical Tradition ; 4. The Multiple Lives of Rajatarangini: Orientalist and Nationalist Knowledge Production in Kashmir and Colonial India ; 5. The Kashmiri Narrative Public: Textuality, Orality, and Performance ; 6. The Divided Public: Battles over History and Territory in Contemporary Kashmir ; Conclusion ; Glossary ; Bibliography ; About the Author ; Index