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Focusing on the householder in Hindu society, this Omnibus brings together distinguished sociologist T.N. Madan's writings on the theme. With a new Preface, Prologue, Epilogue, and three new appendices, the omnibus sheds light on life and society of Pandits in the Kashmir Valley.
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Focusing on the householder in Hindu society, this Omnibus brings together distinguished sociologist T.N. Madan's writings on the theme. With a new Preface, Prologue, Epilogue, and three new appendices, the omnibus sheds light on life and society of Pandits in the Kashmir Valley.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 688
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Januar 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 152mm x 224mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 798g
- ISBN-13: 9780198069409
- ISBN-10: 0198069405
- Artikelnr.: 32730482
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 688
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Januar 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 152mm x 224mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 798g
- ISBN-13: 9780198069409
- ISBN-10: 0198069405
- Artikelnr.: 32730482
T.N. Madan is Honorary Professor (Sociology) at the Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi and Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi.
* II. Non-renunciation: Themes and Interpretations of Hindu Culture
Preface; Acknowledgements; A Note on Transliteration; Introduction:
Intimations of the Good Life
* Preface
* Prologue: The Householder Tradition in Hindu Society
* I. Family and Kinship: A Study of the Pandits of Rural Kashmir,
Second Enlarged Edition
* 1.: Introduction: Problems and Methods
* 2.: Kashmiri Pandits: History and Social Organization
* 3.: Utrassu-Umanagri
* 4.: The Homestead and the Household
* 5.: Recruitment to the Household: (1) Birth and Adoption
* 6.: Recruitment to the Household (2): Marriage and Incorporation
* 7.8.: The Economic Aspect of the HouseholdPartition of the Household
* 9.: The Family and the Patrilineage
* 10.: The Wider Kinship Structure: Non-Agnatic Kin
* 11.: Household and the Family among the Pandits of Rural Kashmir:
Concluding Review
* Appendix I Structural Implications of Marriage: Wife-givers and
Wife-takers
* Appendix II The Ideology of the Householder
* Appendix III The Language of Kinship: (1) Kinship Terminology
* Appendix IV The Language of Kinship (2): Proverbs
* Appendix V The 'Convoy': A Note on Five Informants
* Appendix VI On Living Intimately with Strangers; Glossary;
References; Index
* II. Non-renunciation: Themes and Interpretations of Hindu Culture
Preface
* 1.: Domesticity and Detachment
* 2.: Auspiciousness and Purity
* 3.: Asceticism and Eroticism
* 4.: The Desired and the Good
* 5.: Living and Dying; Epilogue: The Quest for Hinduism
* Appendix A Note on the Epigraphs; References; Index
* Epilogue Growing up in a Kashmiri Pandit Household
* Appendix I is the Brahmanic Gotra a Grouping of Kin?
* Appendix II The Hindu Family and Development
* Appendix III Auspiciousness and Purity: Some Reconsiderations;
Supplementary Index
Preface; Acknowledgements; A Note on Transliteration; Introduction:
Intimations of the Good Life
* Preface
* Prologue: The Householder Tradition in Hindu Society
* I. Family and Kinship: A Study of the Pandits of Rural Kashmir,
Second Enlarged Edition
* 1.: Introduction: Problems and Methods
* 2.: Kashmiri Pandits: History and Social Organization
* 3.: Utrassu-Umanagri
* 4.: The Homestead and the Household
* 5.: Recruitment to the Household: (1) Birth and Adoption
* 6.: Recruitment to the Household (2): Marriage and Incorporation
* 7.8.: The Economic Aspect of the HouseholdPartition of the Household
* 9.: The Family and the Patrilineage
* 10.: The Wider Kinship Structure: Non-Agnatic Kin
* 11.: Household and the Family among the Pandits of Rural Kashmir:
Concluding Review
* Appendix I Structural Implications of Marriage: Wife-givers and
Wife-takers
* Appendix II The Ideology of the Householder
* Appendix III The Language of Kinship: (1) Kinship Terminology
* Appendix IV The Language of Kinship (2): Proverbs
* Appendix V The 'Convoy': A Note on Five Informants
* Appendix VI On Living Intimately with Strangers; Glossary;
References; Index
* II. Non-renunciation: Themes and Interpretations of Hindu Culture
Preface
* 1.: Domesticity and Detachment
* 2.: Auspiciousness and Purity
* 3.: Asceticism and Eroticism
* 4.: The Desired and the Good
* 5.: Living and Dying; Epilogue: The Quest for Hinduism
* Appendix A Note on the Epigraphs; References; Index
* Epilogue Growing up in a Kashmiri Pandit Household
* Appendix I is the Brahmanic Gotra a Grouping of Kin?
* Appendix II The Hindu Family and Development
* Appendix III Auspiciousness and Purity: Some Reconsiderations;
Supplementary Index
* II. Non-renunciation: Themes and Interpretations of Hindu Culture
Preface; Acknowledgements; A Note on Transliteration; Introduction:
Intimations of the Good Life
* Preface
* Prologue: The Householder Tradition in Hindu Society
* I. Family and Kinship: A Study of the Pandits of Rural Kashmir,
Second Enlarged Edition
* 1.: Introduction: Problems and Methods
* 2.: Kashmiri Pandits: History and Social Organization
* 3.: Utrassu-Umanagri
* 4.: The Homestead and the Household
* 5.: Recruitment to the Household: (1) Birth and Adoption
* 6.: Recruitment to the Household (2): Marriage and Incorporation
* 7.8.: The Economic Aspect of the HouseholdPartition of the Household
* 9.: The Family and the Patrilineage
* 10.: The Wider Kinship Structure: Non-Agnatic Kin
* 11.: Household and the Family among the Pandits of Rural Kashmir:
Concluding Review
* Appendix I Structural Implications of Marriage: Wife-givers and
Wife-takers
* Appendix II The Ideology of the Householder
* Appendix III The Language of Kinship: (1) Kinship Terminology
* Appendix IV The Language of Kinship (2): Proverbs
* Appendix V The 'Convoy': A Note on Five Informants
* Appendix VI On Living Intimately with Strangers; Glossary;
References; Index
* II. Non-renunciation: Themes and Interpretations of Hindu Culture
Preface
* 1.: Domesticity and Detachment
* 2.: Auspiciousness and Purity
* 3.: Asceticism and Eroticism
* 4.: The Desired and the Good
* 5.: Living and Dying; Epilogue: The Quest for Hinduism
* Appendix A Note on the Epigraphs; References; Index
* Epilogue Growing up in a Kashmiri Pandit Household
* Appendix I is the Brahmanic Gotra a Grouping of Kin?
* Appendix II The Hindu Family and Development
* Appendix III Auspiciousness and Purity: Some Reconsiderations;
Supplementary Index
Preface; Acknowledgements; A Note on Transliteration; Introduction:
Intimations of the Good Life
* Preface
* Prologue: The Householder Tradition in Hindu Society
* I. Family and Kinship: A Study of the Pandits of Rural Kashmir,
Second Enlarged Edition
* 1.: Introduction: Problems and Methods
* 2.: Kashmiri Pandits: History and Social Organization
* 3.: Utrassu-Umanagri
* 4.: The Homestead and the Household
* 5.: Recruitment to the Household: (1) Birth and Adoption
* 6.: Recruitment to the Household (2): Marriage and Incorporation
* 7.8.: The Economic Aspect of the HouseholdPartition of the Household
* 9.: The Family and the Patrilineage
* 10.: The Wider Kinship Structure: Non-Agnatic Kin
* 11.: Household and the Family among the Pandits of Rural Kashmir:
Concluding Review
* Appendix I Structural Implications of Marriage: Wife-givers and
Wife-takers
* Appendix II The Ideology of the Householder
* Appendix III The Language of Kinship: (1) Kinship Terminology
* Appendix IV The Language of Kinship (2): Proverbs
* Appendix V The 'Convoy': A Note on Five Informants
* Appendix VI On Living Intimately with Strangers; Glossary;
References; Index
* II. Non-renunciation: Themes and Interpretations of Hindu Culture
Preface
* 1.: Domesticity and Detachment
* 2.: Auspiciousness and Purity
* 3.: Asceticism and Eroticism
* 4.: The Desired and the Good
* 5.: Living and Dying; Epilogue: The Quest for Hinduism
* Appendix A Note on the Epigraphs; References; Index
* Epilogue Growing up in a Kashmiri Pandit Household
* Appendix I is the Brahmanic Gotra a Grouping of Kin?
* Appendix II The Hindu Family and Development
* Appendix III Auspiciousness and Purity: Some Reconsiderations;
Supplementary Index