In the late twentieth century, the scope of  history writing has expanded beyond textual sources to include additional  sources such as literature, coins, art, and architecture. Meanwhile, history  writing on ancient India continues to be burdened by an Indological discourse,  which takes ‘India’ as a monolithic whole and interprets sources in ways that  contribute to a pan-Indian meta-narrative. Sources which are fragmentary in  nature, or located far from the so-called centres of civilisation, are  relegated to the footnotes and margins, merely as tools of corroboration. 
  Seeking History  through Her Source corrects this imbalance by interrogating ‘sources’ in innovative ways.  The authors seek historical realities south of the Vindhyas, and contextualise  oft-neglected sources in their respective local niches. They highlight  literary, art-historical and archaeological sources—such as the Jātakas, Cankam literature, Kāvya narratives, coins and praśastis of local rulers—while also highlighting fragmentary sources, such as label  inscriptions and statuettes. Thus, literature and myths, and even non-textual  traditions are centred as valid ways to address new areas of historical  research, and complicate dominant narratives for a more nuanced and inclusive  understanding of the past. 
  This book will be invaluable to teachers, scholars, and students of  history, as well as to readers interested in learning how history can also be  constructed from fragmentary and regional sources.