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Hindu wife, Hindu nation: community, religion, and cultural nationalism
Tanika Sarkar
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Frontmatter
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Introduction (page 1)
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1 Hindu Wife, Hindu Nation: Domesticity and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Bengal (page 23)
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2 Talking About Scandals: Religion, Law and Love in Late Nineteenth-Century Bengal (page 53)
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3 A Book of Her Own, A Life of Her Own: The Autobiography of a Nineteenth-Century Woman (page 95)
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4 Bankimchandra and the Impossibility of a Political Agenda (page 135)
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5 Imagining Hindu Rashtra: The Hindu and the Muslim in Bankimchandra's Writings (page 163)
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6 Conjugality and Hindu Nationalism: Resisting Colonial Reason and the Death of a Child-Wife (page 191)
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7 A Pre-History of Rights? The Age of Consent Debates in Colonial Bengal (page 226)
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8 Nationalist Iconography: The Image of Women in Nineteenth-Century Bengali Literature (page 250)
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9 Aspects of Contemporary Hindutva Theology: The Voice of Sadhvi Rithambhara (page 268)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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JAS | 62.2 (May. 2003): 683-685 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/3096324 |
BSOAS | 65.3 (2002): 607-609 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/4146060 |
SH | 32.4 (Nov. 2007): 434-445 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/25594167 |
Citable Link
Published: c2001
Publisher: Indiana University Press
- 9780253340467 (hardcover)