Cultural History of  Early South Asia: A Reader presents a wide-ranging survey of the  diverse art forms of early South Asia. In doing so, it departs from the  dominant tendency of treating the arts as static ‘heritage of the past’ with  just exhibition value, and instead perceives them as dynamic processes of  meaning and communication in the  past. It connects cultural production with ordinary life, to explore the  various roles which literature and visual arts played in the lives of their  communities. Here, art is investigated as objects of aesthetic enjoyment, but  also as creations of rhetorical or philosophical moment, as well as of  utilitarian value.
    Through its broad  chronological sweep covering the earliest specimens of cultural expression like  the prehistoric rock paintings of Bhimbetka; the ornaments of the Harappan  culture; the frescoes and rock-cut temples of Ajanta and Ellora; the Pali Jatakas, and South Asian folklore, the  book argues for a variety of audiences in ancient and early medieval South  Asia.
    Bringing together  authoritative voices on South Asian history, archaeology and literature, the  book presents complementary views which will help in understanding the popular  dimensions of the subcontinent’s art and culture. It will acquaint its  readership with fundamental contributions to the region’s art history, and yet  do so in a way that questions and opens up received wisdom, and initiates a new  understanding of early cultural processes. Scholarly, yet accessible, it will  be of enduring relevance for researchers, students of history and cultural  studies, as well as lay readers interested in the artistic traditions of South  Asia.