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Road Communication in North-East India and Beyond: Bridging Culture and People

Road Communication in North-East India and Beyond: Bridging Culture and People

Edited by Tarun Dutta
880 1100 (20% off)
ISBN 13
Barcode icon
9789386682376
Year
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2018
Contents: Foreword: Towards a Sociology from ‘Unexpected Places’ and a Sociology of Possibilities in South Asia/Roma Chatterji. Preface and Acknowledgements. 1. Introduction: Towards a Regional Framework in Disciplinary History and Practices/Ravi Kumar, Dev Nath Pathak and Sasanka Perera. Part I: Contents and Contours: 2. Western Dominance, Academic Dependency and Crisis in South Asian Sociology: Alternative Sociology Imaginations for the Post-national Context/Siri Gamage. 3. Legacies and Challenges of Sociological Traditions in South Asia/Sujata Patel. Part II: (Dis)contents in Legacies and Practices: 4. Deciphering Anthropology, Reckoning with Sociology: A Critical Self-assessment of the Practice of ‘Sociology’ in/on Sri Lanka/Sasanka Perera. 5. Neoliberal Framework of Higher Education and the Possibilities of Doing Critical Sociology in India/Ravi Kumar. 6. Hybridising Sociology: A Challenge for Contemporary Sociological Research in Bangladesh/Shaikh Mohammad Kais. 7. Inequalities, Subjectivities and Resistance: In Search of a Comparative Sociology of Caste in India and Sri Lanka/Kalinga Tudor Silva. Part III: Possibilities amidst Paradoxes of the Contemporary: 8. Teaching Sociology in Nepal: Revisiting the Contemporary Concerns/Uddhab Prasad Pyakurel. 9. Possibility of Institutional and Individuated Sociology in Bhutan: An Enthusiastic Note Saroj Kumar Nepal 10. Possibilities in Doing Anthropology: Perspectives from Bangladesh/Ratan Kumar Roy. 11. Afghanistan as a Critical Lens on Current Challenges for Anthropology and Sociology/Nick Miszak and Alessandro Monsutti. Notes on the Contributors. Index. While intellectual practices always take place within a definite socio-cultural context, disciplinary histories and practices have overlapped with the territorial boundaries of nation-states in South Asia. As a result, the disciplinary history of India, for example, appears to have no relation with that of any other country in the region. Believing that disciplinary histories, even while engaging with the local and the national, are influenced by larger regional forces, Sociology and Social Anthropology in South Asia calls for a more complete understanding of history and culture in the region, over time and at specific moments. In the various chapters, sociologists and social anthropologists from Sri Lanka, India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Bhutan show how social anthropology and sociology have worked as well as collapsed in South Asia, and how a more inclusive research agenda for this intellectually connected region can be imagined. The authors explore the nature and scope of the disciplines emerging in each context; evaluate the relationship between sociology and social anthropology within a historical framework; and focus on the contemporary status of the disciplines, given the increasing thrust towards development objectives and agendas set by NGOs in each country.