000 01154nam a2200181 4500
005 20260115153301.0
008 260115b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9788170338949
037 _cTextual
040 _aRTL
_cRTL
084 _qRTL
245 _aUnderstanding Indian society: The non-brahmanic persperctive
260 _aNew Delhi
_bRawat Publications
_c2005
300 _aviii, 266 p.
_bIncludes bibliographical reference and index
520 _aSociologists and social anthropologists have developed Indological, structural-functional and Marxian approaches towards the understanding of Indian society. Despite a distinctive history of conflict from the times of Buddha to the contemporary Ambedkar, social scientists have made non-Brahman traditions a part of broader Hinduism. In British India, although a number of social reformers had launched anti-systemic movements to challenge the hegemony of upper-caste Hindus but there are several issues of identity, power, conversion, gender inequality and social justice which have not been addressed properly.
700 _aDahiwale, S. M.
_eEditor
_9875971
942 _2CC
_n0
_cTEXL
999 _c1474590
_d1474590