Adventures of a Brahmin Priest: My Travels in the 1857 Rebellion

Mazha Pravas

Price: 695.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780198098904

Publication date:

03/01/2014

Paperback

256 pages

216.0x140.0mm

Price: 695.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780198098904

Publication date:

03/01/2014

Paperback

256 pages

216.0x140.0mm

Translators: Shanta Gokhale, Vishnubhat Godse & Priya Adarkar

Suitable for: General readers and students and scholars of Indian writing in translation, comparative literature, translation studies, and gender and cultural studies

Rights:  World Rights

Translators: Shanta Gokhale, Vishnubhat Godse & Priya Adarkar

Description

A journey to north India in 1857 to mend their fortunes and visit holy places leads a Brahmin priest, Vishnubhat Godse, and his uncle straight into and through the conflict zones of the Great Uprising. Their travel turns into an adventure, a patchwork of pujas, court patronage, and miraculous escapes from fierce battles. Twenty-five years later, Vishnubhat Godse wrote Mazha Pravas. Literally, ‘my journey’, the narration uses nineteenth-century idiom as it describes rituals and prayer, bizarre cross-dressing, battle and blood, and, most memorably, the fall of Jhansi. Straddling both historiography and literature, this Marathi classic published in 1907 interprets the Rebellion as a righteous one and pins its failure to a moral point: in killing women and children the rebels violated the Hindu code of ethics and thus ensured their defeat. This first Indian account of the Uprising is sprinkled with anecdotes and descriptions of courtly relationships. The narrative captures the fear and hysteria of palace intrigues, and above all, the valour of Rani Lakshmibai.

Translators: Shanta Gokhale, Vishnubhat Godse & Priya Adarkar

Translators: Shanta Gokhale, Vishnubhat Godse & Priya Adarkar

Translators: Shanta Gokhale, Vishnubhat Godse & Priya Adarkar

Translators: Shanta Gokhale, Vishnubhat Godse & Priya Adarkar

Description

A journey to north India in 1857 to mend their fortunes and visit holy places leads a Brahmin priest, Vishnubhat Godse, and his uncle straight into and through the conflict zones of the Great Uprising. Their travel turns into an adventure, a patchwork of pujas, court patronage, and miraculous escapes from fierce battles. Twenty-five years later, Vishnubhat Godse wrote Mazha Pravas. Literally, ‘my journey’, the narration uses nineteenth-century idiom as it describes rituals and prayer, bizarre cross-dressing, battle and blood, and, most memorably, the fall of Jhansi. Straddling both historiography and literature, this Marathi classic published in 1907 interprets the Rebellion as a righteous one and pins its failure to a moral point: in killing women and children the rebels violated the Hindu code of ethics and thus ensured their defeat. This first Indian account of the Uprising is sprinkled with anecdotes and descriptions of courtly relationships. The narrative captures the fear and hysteria of palace intrigues, and above all, the valour of Rani Lakshmibai.

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