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Brahmins of the Himalaya

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Uses the everyday histories of Brahmin clans, communities, and families in a prominent small town in the Indian Himalaya to challenge the assumption that only grand metanarratives such as coloniali...
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  • 01 September 2026
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Uses the everyday histories of Brahmin clans, communities, and families in a prominent small town in the Indian Himalaya to challenge the assumption that only grand metanarratives such as colonialism and nationalism matter.

This everyday history of clans, communities, and elite families in Almora, a prominent town in the Indian Himalaya, puts questions of belonging at the heart of an expansive examination of elite Hinduism. Studying a mountainous region sometimes considered marginal within Indian history, Sanjay Joshi explores critically important mainstream concerns via attention to the periphery. Revealing the connections between two meanings of "belonging"—one as a source of identity, the other indicating possession—he addresses large questions: What is the idea of belonging among upper-caste Hindus? How do their ideas of belonging and community change over time? And to what effect? Refusing to conflate the ordinary and everyday with the trivial, Joshi challenges the frequent assumption that only metanarratives such as colonialism and nationalism matter. His exploration of big issues incorporates a plea for attention to the local and the quotidian as equally essential for a proper historical understanding. In addition to state and institutional archives, Joshi draws on unconventional and previously untapped sources: novels, poetry, local-language newspapers, and over six hundred family papers, including rare examples of women's writing within family contexts.

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Price: £95.00
Pages: 350
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Hindu Studies
Publication Date: 01 September 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9798855809169
Format: Hardcover
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"Since readable academic history is often something of an oxymoron, this book is especially welcome. Joshi discusses academic concepts through an analysis of commonplace social and political events to which nonspecialists can relate. His history of the local and its particularities deepens our understanding of caste, clan, and social power by suggesting the need to use but remain wary of the possible obscurities of concepts, theorizations, and overarching frameworks. The everyday, local, and even personal issues examined here make for a more intimate appreciation of larger social and political developments. This stands in contrast, though not in contradiction, to the more standard histories and metahistories written up as imposing and impersonal grand sagas." — Chetan Singh, author of Himalayan Histories: Economy, Polity, Religious Traditions