This book is a cultural history of western India from a fascinatingly  new perspective: language use, writing practices, and relations of power. Its  principal focus is the Modi script, a cursive form widely used for writing the  Marathi language from the medieval era until quite recently. Examining the  changing domains in which Modi flourished and declined over several centuries,  Deshpande charts the interconnections of writing, script, language use, and  structures of social and regional power in early-modern and modern South Asia. 
  Positioning the career of this cursive form within a cluster of scripts,  documents, and language practices, Scripts of Power tracks changing  meanings within literate groups, bureaucratic power, and linguistic identity.  It presents a critical genealogy of diverse power relations that produced the  “regional vernaculars” of the Indian subcontinent – many of which, including  Marathi, are official state languages in India today. 
  Deshpande’s cultural history reveals multiple fractures in language at  its sites of usage over time. It unsettles the notions of language as merely  instrumental for communication, or as a primordial basis for identity, and  makes us see language as history and practice.
  In deploying script as its entry point for large reflections on the  relationship of politics with language, identity, and power, this book will  fascinate and absorb all who are interested in Indian cultural history.