The bhakti radical Ravidas (c 1450–1520), calling himself a ‘tanner now set free’, was the first to envision an Indian utopia in his song “Begumpura”—a modern casteless, classless, tax-free city without sorrow. This was in contrast to the dystopia of the brahmanical kaliyuga. Anticaste intellectuals in India posited utopias much before Thomas More, in 1516, articulated a Renaissance humanist version.Gail Omvedt, in this study, focuses on the worldviews of subaltern visionaries spanning five centuries—Chokhamela, Janabai, Kabir, Ravidas, Tukaram, the Kartabhajas, Phule, Iyothee Thass, Pandita Ramabai, Periyar and Ambedkar. She charts the development of their utopian visions and the socioeconomic characteristics of the societies conceived through this long period.
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Seeking Begumpura : The Social Vision Of Anticaste Intellectuals
Author: Gail Omvedt
The bhakti radical Ravidas (c 1450–1520), calling himself a ‘tanner now set free’, was the first to envision an Indian utopia in his song “Begumpura”—a modern casteless, classless, tax-free city without sorrow. This was in contrast to the dystopia of the brahmanical kaliyuga
Language: English
Publisher: Navayana
Year of Publication: 2008
Binding Type: PAPERBACK
Number of Pages: 304
MRP: 499 INR
Your Price: ₹450.00
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Seeking Begumpura : The Social Vision Of Anticaste Intellectuals
Weight | 0.5 kg |
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Dimensions | 8 × 1 × 10 cm |
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