Worship and Conflict under Colonial Rule
Although temples have been important in South Indian society and history, there have been few attempts to study them within an integrated anthropological framework. Professor Appadurai develops such a framework in this ethnohistorical case study, in which he interprets the politics of worship in the Sri Partasarati Svami Temple, a famous ancient Sri Vaisnava shrine in India. The author uses the methods and concepts of both cultural anthropology and social history to construct a model of institutional change in South Asia under colonial rule. Focusing on the problem of authority as a cultural concept and as a managerial reality, Professor Appadurai considers some classic problems of South Asian anthropology: problems of deference, sumptuary symbolism, and religious organization. In addition, he addresses such issues as the nature of conflict under a hybrid colonial legal system, the political implications of sumptuary disputes, and the structure of relations between polity and religion in pre-modern South Asia. These aspects of the study should interest a broad range of scholars.
Product details
December 2007Paperback
9780521053587
280 pages
215 × 139 × 15 mm
0.369kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Note on transliteration
- Introduction
- 1. The South Indian temple: cultural model and historical problem
- 2. Kings, sects, and temples: South Indian Sri Vaisnavism, 1350–1700
- 3. British rule and temple politics, 1700–1826
- 4. From bureaucracy to judiciary, 1826–1878
- 5. Litigation and the politics of sectarian control, 1878–1925
- 6. Rethinking the present: some contextual implications
- Appendices
- Bibliography
- Index.