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Culture of Encounters

Sanskrit at the Mughal Court
  • Audrey Truschke
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2016
View more publications by Columbia University Press
South Asia Across the Disciplines
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About this book

Culture of Encounters recasts the Mughal Empire as a polyglot polity that collaborated with its Indian subjects to envision its sovereignty. This study also reframes the development of Brahman and Jain communities under Mughal rule, which coalesced around carefully selected, politically salient memories of imperial interaction. Culture of Encounters certifies the critical role of the sociology of empire in building the Mughal polity, which came to irrevocably shape the literary and ruling cultures of early modern India.
Recasts the Mughal Empire as a polyglot polity that collaborated with its Indian subjects to envision its sovereignty

Author / Editor information

Audrey Truschke is assistant professor of South Asian history at Rutgers University–Newark and a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at Stanford University. She writes about cultural and intellectual history, the relationship between empire and literature, and cross-cultural interactions in early modern South Asia.

Reviews

Carl W. Ernst, University of North Carolina:
Cultures of Encounter is a breakthrough in modern scholarship on the history and culture of South Asia. This absorbing account of the interaction of Persian and Sanskrit offers a powerful corrective to conventional one-sided narratives.

Richard M. Eaton, University of Arizona:
A remarkable achievement. Exploiting a substantial archive of Sanskrit materials, Truschke reveals a vibrantly multicultural Mughal court, one more thoroughly Indian than is commonly thought, owing to its close engagement with the land's oldest literary culture.

Francesca Orsini, SOAS, University of London:
In Culture of Encounters, Audrey Truschke makes a compelling argument for the importance of Sanskrit and Sanskrit intellectuals in the Mughal court. Although certain aspects of these 'encounters' have been researched before, Truschke's work is more comprehensive, and her precise textual analyses go further than any others so far. This is an important and impressive work that should change the field of Mughal studies.


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
March 1, 2016
eBook ISBN:
9780231540971
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
384
Other:
10 b&w illustrations
Downloaded on 10.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7312/trus17362/html
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