Society in Ancient India : evolution since the Vedic times based on Sanskrit, Pali, Prakrit, and other classical sources /
Material type:
- 9788124600795
- 934 Su773 S 102322
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Ubhayabharati General Stacks | Non-fiction | 934 Su773 S 102322 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 102322 |
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934 M927 G 103087 The Glory of Patan / | 934 R6649 A 102131 Aśoka and the Decline of the Mauryas / | 934 R6649 C 102101 Cultural Pasts : | 934 Su773 S 102322 Society in Ancient India : | 934.1 M3148 P 102093 Prehistory and Archaeology of Northeast India : | 951.05092 Al263 M 101993 Mao's Little Red Book : | 954/.14035 Sh923 R 102042 Revolutionary Pamphlets Propaganda and Political Culture in Colonial Bengal / |
Includes passages in Sanskrit.
It is a fascinating, meticulously documented study unveiling, for the first time, the ancient Indian society in all its variegated evolutionary expressions across about two-and-a-half millennia: since the Vedic times (c. 1500 BC) with a beautifully well-knit account of its religions and cultic practices; economic paradigms; polity and statecraft; educational set-up; customes, manners, etiquettes; food habits, drinks, dress styles; sports, pastimes, modes of recreations; sex life and sexual morality; casteist hierarchies; attitude towards women; and its crimes, punishments and legal codes. Epitomising a lifetime of Dr. Banerji s research on ancient India, the book vividly captures all different articulations of sociological import from a whole body of traditional writings: both sacred and secular. Again, it turns out to be the first ever study to singly explore the sociological orientations of the Vedic Samhitas, Brahmanas, Upanishads, Kalpasutras, Vyakaranas, Puranas, Smritishastras, Tantric texts, the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, Kautilya s Arthashastra, and many other Sanskrit classics besides Buddhist and Jaina works in Pali, Prakrit and Apabhramsha languages. With highly informative appendices, extensive bibliographic references and a glossary of technical/unfamiliar words, the book holds out enduring appeal to both scholars and discerning readers.
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