This dissertation traces the role of first-person narratives in the writing of Mughal history. Beginning with the autobiographical writing of Babur (b. 1526), the first Mughal emperor, and concluding with the writing of Bhimsen Saxena (b. 1649), a news-writer employed by the Mughal imperial army, this dissertation argues that the relationship between autobiographical accounts and Mughal empire was reciprocal. Changes in idioms of empire were recorded through first-person narratives, and such narratives in turn produced, mapped, and imagined empire. Furthermore, Mughal autobiographical accounts formed a textual space in which narratives of subjectivity and interiority were preserved, and changing notions of sovereignty and authority articula...
International audienceTaking into account the renewal of general propositions in the historiography ...
This thesis focuses on the political discourse of Mughal Emperor Akbar Shah (r.1556-1605) and its ap...
The paper discusses the ways in which the sultanates of Aḥmadnagar and Bījāpūr in the Deccan Platea...
This dissertation traces the role of first-person narratives in the writing of Mughal history. Begin...
Writing Self, Writing Empire examines the life, career, and writings of the Mughal state secretary, ...
This article examines the intertwined literary and political processes that moulded the texts of Mug...
In this article, Mughal understandings of their own past are reconstructed from the standpoint of Mu...
This dissertation studies certain Hindi and Persian narratives of the War of Succession (1658) to su...
textIndividuality – both as a philosophical category and a way of living – forms the focal point of ...
"Writing Self, Writing Empire examines the life, career, and writings of the Mughal state secretary,...
"Writing Self, Writing Empire examines the life, career, and writings of the Mughal state secretary,...
Drawing upon the writings of service professionals, including soldiers, scribes, legal officials and...
International audienceThis article argues against the common view according to which the Mughal empe...
1857 remains a central watershed in the North Indian history, marking an end to the Mughal rule and ...
In the seventeenth century, the Mughal Empire in South Asia witnessed a remarkable political experim...
International audienceTaking into account the renewal of general propositions in the historiography ...
This thesis focuses on the political discourse of Mughal Emperor Akbar Shah (r.1556-1605) and its ap...
The paper discusses the ways in which the sultanates of Aḥmadnagar and Bījāpūr in the Deccan Platea...
This dissertation traces the role of first-person narratives in the writing of Mughal history. Begin...
Writing Self, Writing Empire examines the life, career, and writings of the Mughal state secretary, ...
This article examines the intertwined literary and political processes that moulded the texts of Mug...
In this article, Mughal understandings of their own past are reconstructed from the standpoint of Mu...
This dissertation studies certain Hindi and Persian narratives of the War of Succession (1658) to su...
textIndividuality – both as a philosophical category and a way of living – forms the focal point of ...
"Writing Self, Writing Empire examines the life, career, and writings of the Mughal state secretary,...
"Writing Self, Writing Empire examines the life, career, and writings of the Mughal state secretary,...
Drawing upon the writings of service professionals, including soldiers, scribes, legal officials and...
International audienceThis article argues against the common view according to which the Mughal empe...
1857 remains a central watershed in the North Indian history, marking an end to the Mughal rule and ...
In the seventeenth century, the Mughal Empire in South Asia witnessed a remarkable political experim...
International audienceTaking into account the renewal of general propositions in the historiography ...
This thesis focuses on the political discourse of Mughal Emperor Akbar Shah (r.1556-1605) and its ap...
The paper discusses the ways in which the sultanates of Aḥmadnagar and Bījāpūr in the Deccan Platea...