This volume tackles a widespread stereotype in academic studies, according to which pre-colonial India consisted of territorial units with ill-defined, fuzzy boundaries, and where territory had, and still has, little value as a cognitive category. In aiming to reconsider this perspective, the book follows two converging lines of enquiry. One explores the conceptions that stress the mutual determination of places and people, and the entrenchment of their identity in the soil. The other analyse..
South Asia, another name for the Indian Subcontinent, is a recent concept (only about six decades ol...
Ever since the reorganisation of states in India in 1956, the Central government has reacted to the...
Preprint of a chapter to be published in: Territory, Soil and Society in South Asia, dir. Daniela Be...
International audienceThis volume has been prepared with a view to confront a widespread stereotype ...
Preprint of the introduction to the volume: Territory, Soil and Society in South Asia, ed. Daniela B...
Daniela Berti & Gilles Tarabout (dir.), 2009, Territory, Soil and Society in South Asia, New Delhi, ...
Landscaping India investigates the use of landscapes in colonial and anti-colonial representations o...
In both intimate and abstract encounters, India is today understood as a land certain, and a land co...
Indian territory, from regional to local level, remains a fundamentally composite space, divided int...
From the 1820s to the 1850s, the British Indian state undertook its final major phase of expansion t...
The objective of this seminar is to reflect, through the theme of identity and territory, on the pra...
Statemaking and Territory in South Asia: Lessons from the Anglo-Gorkha War (1814-1816) seeks to unde...
Once the British became a colonial power in south Asia in the eighteenth century, they had to strugg...
This dissertation examines how colonial border-making practices in British India changed pre-colonia...
The framing of regions, and in this case 'South Asia', has often been done in ostensibly objective t...
South Asia, another name for the Indian Subcontinent, is a recent concept (only about six decades ol...
Ever since the reorganisation of states in India in 1956, the Central government has reacted to the...
Preprint of a chapter to be published in: Territory, Soil and Society in South Asia, dir. Daniela Be...
International audienceThis volume has been prepared with a view to confront a widespread stereotype ...
Preprint of the introduction to the volume: Territory, Soil and Society in South Asia, ed. Daniela B...
Daniela Berti & Gilles Tarabout (dir.), 2009, Territory, Soil and Society in South Asia, New Delhi, ...
Landscaping India investigates the use of landscapes in colonial and anti-colonial representations o...
In both intimate and abstract encounters, India is today understood as a land certain, and a land co...
Indian territory, from regional to local level, remains a fundamentally composite space, divided int...
From the 1820s to the 1850s, the British Indian state undertook its final major phase of expansion t...
The objective of this seminar is to reflect, through the theme of identity and territory, on the pra...
Statemaking and Territory in South Asia: Lessons from the Anglo-Gorkha War (1814-1816) seeks to unde...
Once the British became a colonial power in south Asia in the eighteenth century, they had to strugg...
This dissertation examines how colonial border-making practices in British India changed pre-colonia...
The framing of regions, and in this case 'South Asia', has often been done in ostensibly objective t...
South Asia, another name for the Indian Subcontinent, is a recent concept (only about six decades ol...
Ever since the reorganisation of states in India in 1956, the Central government has reacted to the...
Preprint of a chapter to be published in: Territory, Soil and Society in South Asia, dir. Daniela Be...