PENSUM

Faglærer: Pamela G. Price

Nyere Global Historie 1330--The British Colonial Period, 1750-1920

Arild Engelsen Ruud, Eldrid Mageli, Pamela Price, Indias historie med Pakistan og Bangladesh (Oslo:Cappelen Akadmisk Forlag, 2004), pp. 208-215, 228-230, 237-243, 245-248.  Students should review the pages from this book in the general nyere global history pensum. 18 s.

 *David Kopf, “British Orientalism and the Bengal Renaissance: Chapter II, ‘The Orientalist in Search of a Golden Age”, in T. R. Metcalf, ed., Modern India: An Interpretive Anthology (London: The MacmIllan Company, 1971), pp. 131-142. 11 s.

 *S.N. Mukherjee, “Class, Caste and Politics in Calcutta, 1815-38”, in Edmund Leach, and S.N. Mukherjee, Elites in South Asia (Cambridge: Cambridge University press, 1970), pp. 33-78 45 s.                                                                                                                                                                      

*Robert Frykenberg, “Elite Groups in a South Indian District: 1788-1858”, in The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 24, No. 2, 1965, pp. 261-81.  20 s.

 *David Ludden, “Anglo-Indian Empire”, in Ludden, Peasant History in South India (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985), pp. 101-129.  30 s.

*Gordon Johnson, “Chitpavan Brahmins and Politics in Western India in the late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries”, Leach and Mukherjee, Elites…. pp. 94-118.    24 s.

*John R. McLane, “The early Congress, Hindu Populism, and the Wider Society,” in Richard Sesson and Stanley Wolpert, eds., Congress and Indian Nationalism: The Pre-Independence Phase (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988),  pp. 47-61 14 s.

*Kenneth W. Jones, “Communalism in the Punjab: The Arya Samaj Contribution”, in Metcalf, Modern India…., pp. 206-220.  14 s.

*S.R. Mehrotra, ”The Early Indian National Congress, 1885-1918: Ideals, Objectives and Organization”, in B.R. Nanda, ed., Essays in Modern Indian History (Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1980), pp. 42-64.    22 s.

*Meredith Borthwick, The Changing Role of Women in Bengal, 1849-1905 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984), pp. 3-59.  56 s.

*Sandria B. Freitag, “Sacred Symbol as Mobilizing Ideology: The North Indian Search for a “Hindu” Community”,  in Comparative Studies in Society and History, 1980, Vol. 22, No. 4, pp.  597-625.      28 s,

 

                                                                                                             Total:   282 s.

Kilder

*S.R. Ashton, Colonialism in India: A GCSE Source Book for Teachers (London: The British Library, 1988), pp.  26-30,  37-45, 50-59, 67-75.                                                             29 s.