Lineages Of Brahman Power: Caste, Family, and the State in Western India 1600–1900
Rosalind O’hanlon (Author)
Price
1395
ISBN
9788178246925
Language
English
Pages
452
Format
Hardback
Dimensions
140 x 216 mm
Year of Publishing
2025
Territorial Rights
Restricted
Imprint
Permanent Black
Catalogues

The Marathas of western India came into prominence in the seventeenth century, when Shivaji carved out an independent kingdom. In the eighteenth century the Marathas established an India-wide empire, with their Brahman leaders entrenching religious orthodoxy at the heart of their state. Later, it was from Maharashtra – the “crucible of Indian nationalism” – that India’s leading nationalists emerged, as did Babasaheb Ambedkar and V.D. Savarkar.

Through thematically linked essays, Rosalind O’Hanlon explores the relatively little-known social histories of Maratha Brahman communities. She shows how, despite much-debated uncertainties about Brahman identity, their religious status, legal-administrative skills, and the unities of the Brahman scholar household brought them success across early modern India.

Later, Brahmans set some of the terms for caste politics under colonialism. As scribal rivals challenged their social dominance, some sought to tighten caste norms. The emergence of a successful Anglophone Brahman middle class deepened divisions over the meaning of Brahman identity in the modern era. As non-Brahmans and Dalits sharpened their critiques, some Brahmans looked towards Hindu nationalism.

This major work is indispensable for an understanding of the making of Brahman power, its internal contradictions, its repercussions in the colonial era, and its continuing legacy.

Rosalind O’Hanlon has been long acknowledged as an authority on India’s social and intellectual history, more specifically in relation to Maharashtra. She is a Fellow of the British Academy and Professor Emeritus in Indian History and Culture at the University of Oxford. She has published extensively on western India from the early modern centuries to the present. She has two particular interests: first, in the many historical lives of caste, for which India’s Marathi-speaking regions provide rich material; and second, the history of the family as a place where women’s life-chances are determined.
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