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Friday, February 25, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Propsals for Reference Volumes on Religion, ABC-CLIO

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, February 25, 2011 11:24 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Propsals for Reference Volumes on Religion, ABC-CLIO


> H-ASIA
> February 25, 2011
>
> Call for Reference Proposals on Religious topics, ABC-CLIO
>
> ***********************************************************************
> Ed. note:
> "And further, by these, my son, be admonished: of making many books there
> is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh"
> Ecclesiastes XII.12 FFC
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> Call for Reference Proposals
>
> Date Submitted: 2011-02-22
> Announcement ID: 183303
>
> ABC-CLIO Publishers invites proposals in the category of Religion for its
> ABC-CLIO and Greenwood imprints (reference works). Publication dates are
> to be determined, starting in 2012.
>
> Reference works include approximately 100-150 entries per volume, with
> word counts ranging from 500-4000 words per entry. The General Editor is
> responsible for creating the headword (entry) list, recruiting
> contributors, and overall editorial management. Compensation to be
> determined on a project-by-project basis. We are currently seeking
> proposals from potential General Editors. Topics of interest include, but
> are not limited to:
>
>
> Judaism: A Historical Encyclopedia (4 volumes)
>
> Islam: A Worldwide Encyclopedia (4 volumes)
>
> Christianity: A Worldwide Encyclopedia (5 volumes)
>
> Buddhism: A Worldwide Encyclopedia (4 volumes)
>
> Animism: A Worldwide Encyclopedia (3 volumes)
>
> Religious Heresy: A Worldwide Encyclopedia (3 volumes)
>
> Mary in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Worlds Most
> Recognized Mother (2 volumes)
>
> Mohammed in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Prophet
> of God (2 volumes)
>
> Jesus in Scripture, Tradition, History, and Legend: A World Encyclopedia
> (3 volumes)
>
> Abraham in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Founder
> of Monotheism (2 volumes)
>
> Buddha in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Awakened
> One (2 volumes)
>
> Krishna in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Lord of
> Many Names (2 volumes)
>
> Moses in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of Gods Law-Giver
> (2 volumes)
>
> Voices of the Reformation: Documents from the Reformation (with teaching
> apparatus, 1 volume)
>
> Voices of the Counter Reformation: Documents from the Counter Reformation
> (with teaching apparatus, 1 volume) Voices of Early
>
> Buddhism: Documents from the Beginnings of Buddhism (with teaching
> apparatus, 1 volume) Voices of Medieval Christianity: Documents from
>
> Christianity in the European Middle Ages (with teaching apparatus, 1
> volume)
>
> Televangelism: A Historical Encyclopedia (1 volume)
>
> Marriage and World Religions: A Historical Encyclopedia (3 volumes)
>
> Religion and Sexuality: A Historical Encyclopedia (3 volumes)
>
> Religious Wars in World History: A Historical Encyclopedia (3 volumes)
>
> The Worlds Religious Orders and Monastic Traditions: A Historical
> Encyclopedia (4 volumes)
>
> Christianity in Africa: A Historical Encyclopedia (2 volumes)
>
> The Worlds Most Influential Religious Leaders (3 volumes)
>
> Americas Most Influential Religious Leaders (2 volumes)
>
> Modern Religious Founders: An Encyclopedia of the Fathers, Mothers,
>
> Originators, and Conceivers of Recent, new, and Emergent Religions (3
> volumes)
>
> Megachurches: The Worlds Biggest Churches and Congregations (1 volume)
>
> Great Events in Religion: A Worldwide Encyclopedia (3 volumes)
>
> Contemporary Judaism in the United States: An Encyclopedia of Belief,
> Practice, and Culture (2 volumes)
>
> Religion and Politics in World History: An Encyclopedia (3 volumes)
>
> Encyclopedia of Great Events in Religion in American History (2 volumes)
>
> Encyclopedia of New Religions (2 volumes)
>
> Religion and Economics: The Role of Economics and Finance in the Worlds
> Religions (2 volumes)
>
> Role of Religion in Healthcare and Medicine: An Encyclopedia of Key Issues
> and Topics (2 volumes)
>
> See our catalog at www.abc-clio.com.
>
> Email queries and proposals to Michael Wilt (mwilt@abc-clio.com).
>
>
> Michael Wilt
> Senior Acquisitions Editor
> ABC-CLIO
> Santa Barbara, CA
> Email: mwilt@abc-clio.com
> Visit the website at http://www.abc-clio.com
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a
> free service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
> announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
> directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net
> cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements appearing
> in this service. Send comments & questions to H-Net Webstaff at URL
> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>
>
> H-Net Humanities & Social Sciences Online Hosted by Matrix at
> Michigan State University Copyright (c) 1995-2011
> ************************************************************************
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> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
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> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
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Fw: H-ASIA: CFP Cultural Transformation: Development Initiatives and Social Movements, Dhaka, 17-18 December 2011

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, February 25, 2011 11:05 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP Cultural Transformation: Development Initiatives and
Social Movements, Dhaka, 17-18 December 2011


> H-ASIA
> February 25, 2011
>
> Call for Papers for conference on "Cultural Transformation: Development
> Initiatives and Social Movements", Inter-Asia Cultural Studies Society,
> Dhaka, Decedmber 17-18, 2011
>
> ***********************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> Calls for Papers for conference on "Cultural Transformation: Development
> Initiatives and Social Movements"
>
> Location: Bangladesh
> Call for Papers Date: 2011-05-31
> Date Submitted: 2011-02-24
> Announcement ID: 183337
>
> The bi-annual conference of the Inter Asia Cultural Studies Society
> (IACSS), which is engaged in exploring new ways to re-imagine the idea of
> Asia in the new century will be held from 17-18 December, 2011 in Dhaka.
>
> Inter-disciplinary in nature, the conference will establish a dialogue
> between academics, practitioners, social and cultural activists from
> inside and outside the region to problematise the idea of Asia. The
> conference is being hosted by BRAC University and is organized by the
> Department of English and Humanities and BRAC Development Institute.
> South Asia in Inter-Asia
>
> This years conference will bring in South Asia more centrally within IACSS
> and also makes efforts to draw in scholars from West Asia into the fold of
> IACSS. Hosted in Bangladesh, this conference will be able to shed light on
> groundbreaking innovations in the development arena, such as in education,
> livelihoods, health, etc.
>
> New cultural forms and trends such as music, dance, film and popular
> literature, will bring out the mutual influences between cultural practice
> and economic and social development.
>
> Envisioning a new picture of Asia an other Asia this conference invites
> paper and panel proposals on issues such as
>
> Social movements and struggles
>
> Development initiatives and cultural change
>
> Asian feminisms and social change
>
> The post-colonial, the national and the pan-Asian in the formation of
> new cultural identities Changes and developments in popular cultural
> practices, including music, dance, film and popular literature
>
> Other topics in Inter-Asia Cultural Studies are also welcome
>
> Panels should comprise of 3-5 papers. Proposals for papers and panels will
> be submitted by the 31st of May 2011. Acceptance of panels will be
> announced by June 20 2011.
>
> Proposals for papers and panels should include:
> abstracts of papers (maximum 300 words)
> panels proposals should include a session abstract, plus abstracts of
> individual papers
> short biographical information, including institutional affiliation.
>
> Please email paper and panel proposals to culturaltrans@bracu.ac.bd
>
> Participants need to pay for their own travel and accommodation. However,
> accommodation in Dhaka will be arranged by the hosts.
>
> A few small bursaries may be available, information for which will be
> posted later.
>
> More information will be available on
> http://www.bracu.ac.bd/event/culturaltransformations as we plan further.
>
>
> Firdous Azim
> Chairperson of the Department of English and Humanities
> BRAC University
> 66 Mohakhali C.A, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh.
> Phone: +8802-8824051. Fax: +8802-8810383.
> Email: culturaltrans@bracu.ac.bd
>
> Visit the website at http://www.bracu.ac.bd/event/culturaltransformations
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a
> free service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
> announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
> directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net
> cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements appearing
> in this service. Send comments & questions to H-Net Webstaff at URL
> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>
>
> H-Net Humanities & Social Sciences Online Hosted by Matrix at
> Michigan State University Copyright (c) 1995-2011
> ************************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
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Fw: H-ASIA: Prof. Michael F. Marra (1956-2011)

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Saturday, February 26, 2011 4:25 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: Prof. Michael F. Marra (1956-2011)


> H-ASIA
> February 25, 2011
>
> Professor Michael/Michele F. Marra (1956-2011)
> ************************************************************************
> Ed note: Shortly after the news of the death of Michael Marra was posted
> on H-Japan, my BAS colleague Frank Joseph Shulman sent in a note which
> expanded on Professor Marra, noting that he had, upon becoming an American
> citizen changed his given name from the Italian Michele to Michael. I
> appreciate Frank's assistance and the examples of bibliographic notice
> which may eliminate any confusion as to there being two people rather than
> one. Professor Marra had a distinguished career and his passing takes
> from us a major contributor to Japanese studies in the US. FFC
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: Janet R. Goodwin <jan@cs.csustan.edu>
>
> It is my sad duty to report the death of Michael F. Marra, professor of
> Japanese literature, aesthetics, and hermeneutics at UCLA. An excellent
> and prolific scholar, Prof. Marra was also a good friend to many of us in
> the field and an outstanding teacher. A full obituary will be published
> as soon as it becomes available.
>
> --Janet Goodwin, H-Japan co-editor
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: Frank Joseph Shulman <fshulman@umd.edu>
>
> Thank you very much for the posting about Michael Marra's death. I, for
> one, appreciate having this information disseminated to a large audience.
>
> May I suggest that the obituary and any other future announcements on
> H-JAPAN and H-ASIA include his TWO names: Michael and Michele. Marra was
> born in Italy in 1956 and named Michele. After becoming a U.S. citizen,
> he legally changed his name to Michael. See the record for him in the
> Library of Congress Authorities File:
>
> http://authorities.loc.gov/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?AuthRecID=1648444&v1=1&HC=1&SEQ=20110224161752&PID=qahwA-h8IlZqGfsS5yJNc-3VBDe
>
> The books that he published through 1999 appeared under the name
> "Michele": See the Library of Congress online catalog:
> http://catalog.loc.gov/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?Search%5FArg=Marra%20Michael&Search%5FCode=NAME%5F&CNT=100&PID=zwhGAXXlF-BaiE8uNFBPXFM_nZa&BROWSE=1&HC=12&SID=1
> as well as the library catalogs of other academic and resaerch libraries
> that contain records for his books. The University of Maryland College
> Park Libraries, for example, hold seven of his books:
>
> The aesthetics of discontent : politics and reclusion in medieval Japanese
> literature / Michele Marra. [1991]
>
> A history of modern Japanese aesthetics / translated and edited by Michael
> F. Marra. [2001]
>
> Japanese hermeneutics : current debates on aesthetics and interpretation /
> edited by Michael F. Marra. [2002]
>
> Kuki Shuzo : a philosopher's poetry and poetics / translated and edited by
> Michael F. Marra. [2004]
>
> Modern Japanese aesthetics : a reader / Michele Marra. [1999]
>
> The poetics of Motoori Norinaga : a hermeneutical journey / translated and
> edited by Michael F. Marra. [2007]
>
> Representations of power: the literary politics of medieval Japan/ Michele
> Marra. [1993]
>
> The online Bibliography of Asian Studies of the Association for Asian
> Studies, in turn, includes a very large number of bibliographical entries
> under each one of his names. To cite just three examples of each (from
> among many):
>
> Author: Marra, Michael
> Title: Frameworks of meaning: old aesthetic categories and the present
> Citation: In: Ueda, Atsuko; Okada, Richard H., eds. Literature and
> literary theory. West Lafayette, Ind.: Association for for Japanese
> Literary Studies, 2008. vi, 287p. (PAJLS: proceedings of the Association
> for Japanese Literary Studies, vol.9) 153-163
>
> Author: Marra, Michael F.
> Title: Fields of contention: philology (bunkengaku) and the philosophy of
> literature (bungeigaku)
> Citation: In: Fogel, Joshua A.; Baxter, James C., eds. Historiography and
> Japanese consciousness of values and norms. Part 1: people, words, and
> things: cultural exchange among China, Japan, and the West. Part 2:
> historical consciousness in Japanese texts. Kyoto: International Research
> Center for Japanese Studies, 2002. vi, 242p. 197-221
>
> Author: Marra, Michael F.
> Title: The aesthetics of tradition: making the past present
> Citation: In: Sasaki, Ken-ichi, ed. Asian aesthetics. Singapore: NUS
> Press; Kyoto: Kyoto University Press, 2010. xviii, 309p. 41-55
>
> Author: Marra, Michele
> Title: The conquest of mappo: Jien and Kitabatake Chikafusa
> Citation: Japanese Journal of Religious Studies (Nagoya) 12, no.4 (Dec
> 1985) 319-341
>
> Author: Marra, Michele
> Title: Nativist hermeneutics: the interpretative strategies of Motoori
> Norinaga and Fujitani Mitsue
> Citation: Japan Review: Bulletin of the International Research Center for
> Japanese Studies = Nichibunken (Kyoto) no.10 (1998) 17-52
>
> Author: Marra, Michele
> Title: Marra, Michele. Idealism, Christianity, and poetics: Onishi Hajime;
> accompanied by: Text: There is No Religion in Waka by Onishi Hajime
> Citation: In: Marra, Michele. Modern Japanese aesthetics: a reader.
> Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1999. x, 322p. 79-92
>
> With my thanks once again,
>
> Frank
>
> Frank Joseph Shulman
> Bibliographer, Editor and Consultant for Reference Publications
> in Asian Studies
> Associate Editor, Bibliography of Asian Studies
> 9225 Limestone Place
> College Park, Maryland 20740-3943 (U.S.A.)
> E-mail: fshulman@umd.edu
> ******************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
> H-ASIA WEB HOMEPAGE URL: http://h-net.msu.edu/~asia/

Fw: H-ASIA: CFP SCSC 2011 Conference Session on Early Modern Travel Narratives, Fort Worth, TX, 27-30 Oct 2011

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, February 25, 2011 10:58 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: CFP SCSC 2011 Conference Session on Early Modern Travel
Narratives, Fort Worth, TX, 27-30 Oct 2011


> H-ASIA
> February 25, 2011
>
> Call for papers: Early Modern Travel Narratives, Sixteenth Century Studies
> Conference, Fort Worth, TX, Octgober 27-30, 2011
> ***********************************************************************
> From: H-Net Announcements <announce@MAIL.H-NET.MSU.EDU>
>
> SCSC 2011 Conference Session on Early Modern Travel Narratives
>
> Location: Texas, United States
> Call for Papers Date: 2011-03-20 (in 23 days)
> Date Submitted: 2011-02-23
> Announcement ID: 183320
>
> Call for Papers for one or two sessions being organized on early modern
> travel narratives for the Sixteenth Century Society Conference to be held
> in Fort Worth, TX on Oct. 27-30, 2011.
>
> The session organizer seeks to include scholars whose work focuses on how
> European travel narratives portray non-europeans, how peoples from other
> cultures were described (culturally, religiously, physically, etc), and
> how this description was received in Europe. The organizer welcomes
> submissions from young scholars as well as those more established in the
> profession.
>
> Please send a short abstract (about 250 words), and brief CV by Mar 20,
> 2011.
>
>
> Donald J. Harreld
> Dept. of History
> Brigham Young University
> Provo, UT 84660
> phone: 801-422-4321
> Email: donald_harreld@byu.edu
>
>
>
> H-Net reproduces announcements that have been submitted to us as a
> free service to the academic community. If you are interested in an
> announcement listed here, please contact the organizers or patrons
> directly. Though we strive to provide accurate information, H-Net
> cannot accept responsibility for the text of announcements appearing
> in this service. Send comments & questions to H-Net Webstaff at URL
> <webstaff@mail.h-net.msu.edu>
>
> H-Net Humanities & Social Sciences Online Hosted by Matrix at
> Michigan State University Copyright (c) 1995-2011
> ************************************************************************
> To post to H-ASIA simply send your message to:
> <H-ASIA@h-net.msu.edu>
> For holidays or short absences send post to:
> <listserv@h-net.msu.edu> with message:
> SET H-ASIA NOMAIL
> Upon return, send post with message SET H-ASIA MAIL
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Fw: H-ASIA: REVIEW On the East India Company

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Saturday, February 26, 2011 4:17 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: REVIEW On the East India Company


> H-ASIA
> February 25, 2011
>
> Book Review (orig pub. H-Soz-u-Kult) by Michael Mann on Hugh V. Bowen.
> _The Business of Empire: The East India Company and Imperial Britain,
> 1756-1833_; George K. McGilvary. _East India Patronage and the British
> State: The Scottish Elite and Politics in the Eighteenth Century_;
> George K. McGilvary. _Guardian of the East India Company: The Life of
> Laurence Sulivan_; Anthony Webster. _The Twilight of the East India
> Company: The Evolution of Anglo-Asian Commerce and Politics, 1790-1860_;
> and Anthony Webster. _The Richest East India Merchant: The Life and
> Business of John Palmer of Calcutta, 1767-1836_.
>
> (x-post H-Review)
> ************************************************************************
> From: H-Net Reviews
>
> Sammelrez: The East India Company
>
>
> Hugh V. Bowen. _The Business of Empire: The East India Company and
> Imperial Britain, 1756-1833_. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
> 304p. $99.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-521-84477-2.
>
> George K. McGilvary. _East India Patronage and the British State: The
> Scottish Elite and Politics in the Eighteenth Century_. London:
> I.B.Tauris, 2008. 280p. ISBN 978-1-4416-0851-2.
>
> George K. McGilvary. _Guardian of the East India Company: The Life of
> Laurence Sulivan_. London: I.B.Tauris, 2006. 328 p.
> ISBN 978-1-4237-8768-6.
>
> Anthony Webster. _The Twilight of the East India Company: The Evolution of
> Anglo-Asian Commerce and Politics, 1790-1860_. Rochester: Boydell &
> Brewer, 2009. 205 p. $90.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-1-84383-475-5.
>
> Anthony Webster. _The Richest East India Merchant: The Life and Business
> of John Palmer of Calcutta, 1767-1836_. Rochester: Boydell & Brewer, 2007.
> 194 p. $80.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-1-84383-303-1.
>
> Reviewed by Michael Mann
> Institut fur Asien- und Afrikawissenschaften, Humboldt Universitaet zu
> Berlin
> Published on H-Soz-u-Kult (February, 2011)
>
>
> Sammelrez: East India Company
>
> The history of the East India Company (EIC) has been the object of much
> consideration and contestation, despite the fact that with subjects
> addressing cultural issues becoming dominant in historical research from
> the middle of the 1990s the interest in matters relating to the EIC has
> gradually been decreasing. Much of the study of the EIC has been focussing
> on administrative-cum-commercial subjects whereas in the 1970s the take on
> perspectives from economic history has helped to shift the focus towards
> accounts integrating economic and social aspects. This development is
> represented by the seminal studies of C. H. Philips on the one hand, and
> of K. N. Chaudhury on the other hand. Cyrill H. Philips, The East India
> Company, 1784-1834, Manchester 1940; Kirti N. Chaudhury, The Trading World
> of Asia and the English East India Company, 1669-1760, Cambridge 1978.
> During the last three or four decades many articles and monographs on the
> EIC discovered new themes and contributed to a broader understanding so
> that a solid basis for general interpretations emerged, one of the recent
> examples is the latest monograph by P. H. Lawson. Philip Lawson, The East
> India Company. A History, London 1993.
>
> Now general histories of EIC have mostly reproduced a narrative which
> concentrates on its transformation from a trading company to an
> administrative organisation between 1770 and 1830 which is then presented
> as the (only) important aspect of empire building in the East, followed by
> the decades of reform in British India. The English Parliaments Regulating
> Act of 1773 and the last Charter for the EIC in 1833 sets the frame for
> this narrative, which centres on the British Empires ascent to global
> dominance. According to it, the empires train, once set into motion, could
> no longer be stopped. More importantly for our concern an differentiated
> reconstruction of the EIC on its own terms its development after 1833 has
> become a kind of postscript to a story which had already happily ended.
> Against this widespread view some studies discussed here, like Anthony
> Websters, The Twilight of the East India Company, provide an alternative
> account highlighting the continuities and changes that took place in the
> first half of the nineteenth century. They show that the EIC-history was
> by far not the linear sort of success story that has been told by
> generations of empire historians.
>
> Added to that, the books under discussion demonstrate a recent trend in
> researching the EIC, namely a renewed interest in commercial and
> administrative aspects which seems to respond to the growing importance of
> the effects of globalisation and the emergence of a new field of academic
> research: global studies. Also, this revivalism seems to reflect a new
> historiographical wave on the glory days of the British Empire, the only
> world empire of the nineteenth and the first half of the twentieth
> century. The British Empire strikes back with the East India Company
> riding again. The selection of books mirrors a third tendency of current
> research: they follow on the one hand structural and institutional
> concerns and traditional approaches of economic and financial history
> while they also employ biographical approaches, trace individuals,
> especially those who can be characterised as actors of globalisation.
>
> Lets come to the first book: Hugh V. Bowens monograph The Business of
> Empire. Let alone the time-frame it sets itself, the companys development
> between 1756 and 1833, indicates that it concentrates on precisely the
> part of the empire-history which has been most dealt with, that is the
> transformation of the EIC from a trading corporation into an
> administrative organisation. Thus Bowen rewrites the old-fashioned
> EIC-success story and presents the well-known empire-narrative even though
> he adds new aspects and details. One has to mention positively that his
> history of the EIC is a well written compilation of the EICs business
> history. He profiles the companys London stockholders and directors,
> emphasising their business procedures, working practices and policies to
> changing circumstances in what became British India.
>
> Yet the major shortcoming of the book is its selective writing. Sometimes
> even the latest research findings are missing which is particularly
> striking in the sub-chapter on the abolition of the EICs trading monopoly
> in 1833 (pp. 252-9). Also, the chapter on an empire in writing (pp.
> 151-82) does not include recent research and does not reflect the current
> state of the art. Latest findings on the EICs bookkeeping, cartography,
> data collection, information gathering, its transformation into knowledge
> and effective presentation are not included in the narration.
> Additionally, the concentration on the metropolis as the centre of global
> action mirrors the old-fashioned empire narrative. Despite the fact that
> commercial relations with South Asian centres of production and trading
> grew tremendously during the eighteenth century, only the EICs activities,
> actions and reactions in London are presented depicting the undertaking as
> a most agile and modern enterprise. This is also the reason why the
> narrative of the EICs success story seems to be a repetitive story.
>
> In contrast, Anthony Websters book on the Twilight of the East India
> Company presents a more innovative stance. The first three chapters give a
> conventional overview of the EICs history since 1790 when the
> governor-generalship of Lord Cornwallis set the frame for the colonial
> state in Bengal and British India, and points out the EICs struggle for
> maintaining its monopoly for trade in the East. However, in the following
> chapters four to seven, Webster actually elaborates the history of crisis,
> change and continuities between 1833 and 1860. And here the tremendous
> consequences of this shift in perspective demonstrates itself: the
> established notion of the Great Indian Rebellion of 1857-9 loses its
> relevance as a sharp break in empire history as this political event had
> rather any influence on the economic history of the EIC.
>
> On another note, though the author is fairly acquainted with the companys
> history of these days and its battle for keeping her monopoly, one misses
> the fact that private trade to the East was on the agenda of many British
> undertakers since the foundation of the EIC, in particular from the second
> half of the seventeenth century onwards. So called interlopers were the
> reason for much trouble and they were, finally, successful in establishing
> a second EIC (English, instead of London merchants) at the end of the
> seventeenth century. Its shareholders received a royal charter as well,
> yet, due to competition on the financial markets for trading capital and
> other reasons, both companies were amalgamated into the United Company in
> 1709. However, even after this forced unification, private trade did not
> come to an end and could, at no time, be controlled effectively. I. B.
> Watson told the history of those interlopers in 1980 which Webster should
> have taken into consideration. Ian Bruce Watson, Foundation for Empire.
> English Private Trade in India, 1659-1760, New Delhi 1980. Apparently the
> end of the eighteenth century was not the beginning of the debate on free
> trade, but rather the demand for the end of state monopolies in favour of
> overall trading facilities with open access to all markets had been on the
> table since the beginning of the seventeenth century.
>
> The charter of 1813 ended the trading monopoly of the EIC except to China.
> Within two decades, repercussions of open access to capital, commodities
> and commerce caused the crash of the so called agency houses. These were
> Calcutta based privately operating trading-cum-financing companies with
> close connections to the Asian and English markets. As industrially
> manufactured cotton products flooded the Indian markets particularly that
> of Bengal, and as investment in an expanding Indigo market caused
> overheating within a short time, the said agency houses were not able to
> cope with this additional competition. Apart from this, pressure groups
> from northern British cities like Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester and
> Glasgow strongly favoured the further opening of all Asian markets as well
> as the abolition of trade restrictions like protective customs. As a
> result of this public agitation, in a series of bankruptcies, all agency
> houses collapsed between 1830 and 1834.
>
> The most prominent among them was certainly that of Palmer & Co. Webster
> shows its rise and fall in his second book, The Richest East India
> Merchant. The story of John Palmer and his agency house, his rise to the
> prince of merchants in British India as well as the agencys bankruptcy is
> a fine example of the changing economic and commercial environs within the
> emerging British Empire in Asia. It demonstrates how free trade after 1813
> affected the business of private companies in India, how personal
> entanglement in British Indian politics, machinations with princely
> states, mismanagement and growing incompetence within a company ultimately
> caused the breakdown of a firm. In particular, the dubious practices of
> debt control, a complete absence of effective accounting and cash security
> arrangements, in short: bad financial management, caused the collapse of
> Palmer & Co triggering the bankruptcy of more than thirty agency houses.
> The reinterpretation of the EICs history before 1833 is a necessary
> precondition for its setting as a re-orientating company within a world of
> growing free trade.
>
> The latter aspect is actually the focus of Websters book on the Twilight
> of the East India Company. Taking P. J. Cains and A. G. Hopkins thesis of
> gentlemanly capitalism as a starting point, Webster argues that in
> addition to the capital concentrated in the City (of London), which from
> there directed the British empires expansion from the late seventeenth to
> the early twentieth century Peter J. Cain / Anthony G. Hopkins, British
> Imperialism. Innovation and Expansion, 1688-1914, London 1993. , it was a
> network of northern British commercial and financial interests as well as
> the chambers of commerce in the British Indian and East Asian metropolises
> established by the end of the 1830s that brought about the gradual end of
> the chartered companys state monopoly and the evolution of freely
> accessible markets within the Indian Ocean area and beyond from the late
> eighteenth century onwards. According to Webster it was this complex,
> trans-imperial network of firms and commercial-cum-financial pressure
> groups which used the organs of the EIC for expansion as well as for
> undermining its privileged position.
>
> However, despite the interesting subject, the book has some shortcomings.
> In particular, the parade of numbers and years sometimes disrupt whole
> paragraphs hampering the general flow of reading and understanding.
> Likewise, the narration is sometimes too descriptive often getting lost in
> details. These might have been of some relevance the dissertation that
> this book originally was at the end of the 1970s again indicating the
> then prevalence of the EICs commercial history but is somewhat misplaced
> in a present-day publication. Certainly a valuable contribution, the book
> can hardly be pigeon-holed in any one historiographic genre, as it seems
> to be something between a rather conventional biography of an empire
> builder and an entangled history of an actor of globalization. Overall,
> what is missing is the agency of Indian contemporaries as the narration
> mainly concentrates on the European development in the colonies on the one
> side and the centre of power, that is Great Britain, on the other.
>
> Another development during the 1830s according to Webster was the
> emergence of a new generation of exclusively London based agency houses
> that at the same time tried to establish Indian based banks for raising
> capital in the colony. Yet, the international economic crisis of 1847-8,
> particularly affecting the London financial market, again, destroyed these
> commercial and financial undertakings but paved the way for restricting
> the EICs competences to a mere wing of government in 1853. The abolition
> of the EIC in 1858 was, in the eyes of many London bankers, brokers and
> traders, long overdue. Yet it took until 1874 for the EIC to be finally
> wound up. Seen against this background, the history of the EIC in the
> 1830s and 40s is not merely the afterthought of its successful
> transformation from a commercial corporation into an administrative body
> but the history of gradual changes ultimately facilitating the
> modernisation of British India, in particular the railway and telegraph
> mania between the 1860s and the 1880s. In this respect the book is a solid
> contribution to the narrative of empire building.
>
> The same focus can be found in George K. McGilvary's East India Patronage
> and the British State. The Scottish Elite and Politics in the Eighteenth
> Century. The authors thesis maintains firstly, that the Scottish elite was
> drawn into the orbit of British state building far earlier than hitherto
> assumed, that is, it was not the politics of Henry Dundas from the 1780s
> onwards which made Scots participate in the building of the British Raj in
> India. Rather, they had already been part of the process in the first half
> of the eighteenth century as part of Prime Minister Walpoles state
> building strategies. Secondly, it is argued that patronage by English
> politicians and the reliable part of the Scottish elite after the Union of
> 1701 as well as the rebellions of 1715 and 1745 helped to establish an
> increasing network of patronage which promoted careers of the Scottish
> mercantile, medical and later also military personnel. And in the third
> place it is stated that these early patronage politics played an important
> role in founding the British Empire.
>
> Yet, again the East India Company is merely studied as an instrument of
> the British government, and its dynamism in the Indian Subcontinent beyond
> the context of empire is not taken into consideration. The East, indeed,
> was a career where Scots made their fortunes, which was to be invested in
> the local Scottish economy.
>
> In a somewhat rough and ready posoprographic approach, McGilvary tries to
> give short biographical backgrounds to Scots who became involved in the
> patronage network. Yet, even if one concedes that there was a growing
> Scottish influence within the East India Company, at least from the 1720s
> onwards, in most cases the numbers, though impressive, are cited without
> any reference statistics, that is the proportion to all East India
> employees are missing. Likewise the 24 per cent Scottish soldiers in the
> British Indian army, cited by McGilvary to prove his point, refer to 1830
> when Dundas promotion of Scotsmen was already bearing fruit. Though it has
> been mentioned that due to 1715 and 1745 only after the latter rebellion
> Scotsmen were recruited for overseas army service, the nexus to the 1830
> increase of Scotsmen in the military service has not been pointed out by
> Webster.
>
> Very striking is the detailed narration of John Drummonds fascinating
> political and mercantile life. It seems that his political career on the
> European continent as well as his social-cum-economic position in Scotland
> made him the predestined actor for establishing the above mentioned
> network. Indeed, Drummond, in collaboration with Walpole, may be seen as
> an early and decisive builder of the British Union after 1722. At the same
> time, the story of the EIC at home and abroad lacks detailed analysis and
> latest research findings have not been included. Among the many seminal
> articles missing is Hugh V. Bowens widely appreciated Revenue and Reform.
> Hugh V. Bowen, Revenue and Reform. The Indian Problem in English Politics,
> 1756-1773, Cambridge 1991. If done so, the reader of McGilvarys book would
> have been able to gain a deeper insight into the financial machinations of
> the EIC and the British state during those crucial years, thus placing the
> findings of McGilvary in a much more complex context.
>
> Despite these shortcomings the book certainly deserves attention. Seen
> from a Scottish, a British and an Empire perspective, it contributes to
> the mechanisms of modern state formation in the eighteenth century. Above
> that it becomes clear that networking does not only refer to present-day
> actors of globalisation but that it has been on the
> political-cum-mercantile agenda at least since the early days of modern
> state building. Patronage systems and networking were part and parcel as
> well as markers of the modern state in Europe, and Britain certainly
> spearheaded that development. Focussing on Scotland and the early Union
> seems to be appropriate as this approach has been neglected so far by
> academic research. At the same time the reader will not miss some sort of
> Scottish patriotism (or rather chauvinism). Again, without doubt there was
> an important contribution of Scotsman to the building of the British
> Union, yet to what extent is still open and needs much more academic
> research. In any case, the book marks a valuable point of departure.
>
> Of particular interest is McGilvarys other book on the Guardian of the
> East India Company. It is a biography on Laurence Sulivan who determined
> the politics of the East India Company for more than three decades in the
> second half of the eighteenth century. Much has been written on Sulivan by
> Lucy S. Sutherland highlighting the rivalry between the East India
> Companys two factions of commercial undertakers and colonial expansionists
> in the 1770s and 80s. Lucy S. Sutherland, The East India Company in
> Eighteenth-Century Politics, Oxford 1952. As McGilvary points out in his
> Preface [t]he book concentrates upon what went on in London and from the
> perspective of the companys leaders. (p. ix) Even if one may accept this
> explicitly Eurocentric perspective one wonders the many mistakes with
> respect to Britains and Indias history. Above all, the history of British
> expansion in Bengal and other regions of India is being depicted in a
> rather old-fashioned way simply re-telling the story of Plassey and its
> alleged consequences. Taking recent research into account would have
> helped to prevent such shortcomings.
>
> McGilvary has to re-tell large parts of the East India Companys story as
> his material on Sulivan is rather scattered and incomplete. Often
> McGilvary speculates about Sulivans decisions and deeds as well as his
> character and manners. Lack of sources for a thorough biography is topped
> by a lack of scientific historical tools. For example, on p. 77 the author
> quotes Sulivan writing 1761 in a letter to Chatham (William Pitt the
> Elder) that after having ousted the French from the Carnatic the
> commercial gain would be of no great significance yet the fiscal
> tremendous if the territory would be annexed. On p. 81 Sulivan complains
> in the very same year upon the burden which territorial administration
> will put upon the shoulders of the East India Company. This led McGilvary
> to the conclusion that Sulivan strictly opposed any territorial expansion.
> And on p. 83 the quote of p. 77 suddenly stems from Joseph Dupleix, the
> then governor of Pondichery. McGilvary again quotes Sulivan who rather
> wanted the trade of the company at an end than having it to rely on
> territorial revenues. This is fairly confusing and in any case
> unprofessional.
>
> As Peter J. Marshall put it in his review [t]his book seems to exemplify
> the problems that independent scholars face without an academic support
> network to advise them how to put their findings into a realistic context.
> Peter J. Marshall, Review, in: English Historical Review, 501 (2008), pp.
> 475f. The effort which MacGilvary certainly invested into the finding of
> sources does not correspond with the scientific outcome. Worse, as with
> John Drummond, the protagonist of his other book, McGilvary seems to
> develop sympathy with the celtic fringe of Great Britain highlighting its
> servants national, colonial and imperial service in a somewhat panegyric
> way. Sadly enough Sulivan has much more shortcomings than Drummond.
>
> All in all the reviewed books add a chapter to an old story which is
> basically about the commercial history of the EIC and its promoters as
> well as the empire history. It seems that hitherto men on the spot as part
> of an old-fashioned European expansion and empire history have been turned
> into actors of globalisation, but without actually debating globalisation.
> Hence we find plenty of fascinating and illustrative details and
> additional facts in all the reviewed books, however, at the end of the
> day, no substantial hypothesis or thesis. An exception to the rule may be
> Websters book on the EICs Twighlight. Despite the critique all books are a
> must for readers interested in the history of the EIC. Future research on
> the EIC should concentrate on the role of the undertaking as an agent of
> globalisation. To start with, concepts of globalisation have to be taken
> into consideration to depart from the old-fashioned empire-history and, at
> the same time, to aim at a deeper understanding of modes of globalisation
> in the middle of the nineteenth century.
>
>
>
> If there is additional discussion of this review, you may access it
> through the list discussion logs at:
> http://h-net.msu.edu/cgi-bin/logbrowse.pl.
>
> Citation: Michael Mann. Review of Bowen, Hugh V., _The Business of Empire:
> The East India Company and Imperial Britain, 1756-1833_ and McGilvary,
> George K., _East India Patronage and the British State: The Scottish Elite
> and Politics in the Eighteenth Century_ and McGilvary, George K.,
> _Guardian of the East India Company: The Life of Laurence Sulivan_ and
> Webster, Anthony, _The Twilight of the East India Company: The Evolution
> of Anglo-Asian Commerce and Politics, 1790-1860_ and Webster, Anthony,
> _The Richest East India Merchant: The Life and Business of John Palmer of
> Calcutta, 1767-1836_. H-Soz-u-Kult, H-Net Reviews. February, 2011.
> URL: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=32643
>
> Copyright 2011 by H-Net, Clio-online, and the author, all rights
> reserved. This work may be copied and redistributed for non-commercial,
> educational purposes, if permission is granted by the author and usage
> right holders. For permission please contact H-SOZ-U-KULT@H-NET.MSU.EDU.

Fw: H-ASIA: TOC Muslim World Journal of Human Rights -- New Articles

----- Original Message -----
From: "Frank Conlon" <conlon@U.WASHINGTON.EDU>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Saturday, February 26, 2011 4:30 AM
Subject: H-ASIA: TOC Muslim World Journal of Human Rights -- New Articles


> H-ASIA
> February 25, 2011
>
> Table of contents: Muslim World Journal of Human Rights - New Articles
> ************************************************************************
> From: Mahmood Monshipouri <mm-11320-2297838@bepress.com>
>
>
> NEW ARTICLES Muslim World Journal of Human Rights
>
> http://www.bepress.com/mwjhr
>
> Berkeley Electronic Press is pleased to announce the following articles
> recently published in Muslim World Journal of Human Rights.
>
> ARTICLES
>
> Paradoxes of Democratic Progress in Kuwait: The Case of the Kuwaiti
> Women's Rights Movement
> by Doron Shultziner and Mary Ann Tetreault
>
> Towards Substantive Equality in Iranian Constitutional Discourse
> by Amin Reza Koohestani
>
> Human Rights and Islamic Law: A Legal Analysis Challenging the Husband's
> Authority to Punish 'Rebellious Wives'
> by Murad H. Elsaidi
>
> Citizenship in Question: Chicago Muslims Before and After 9/11
> by Jackleen M. Salem
>
>
> BOOK REVIEWS
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> Review of Islam and the Challenge of Human Rights
> by Mahmood Monshipouri
>
> Review of Justice & Rights: Christian and Muslim Perspectives
> by David T. Buckley
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> CALL FOR PAPERS
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> Muslim World Journal of Human Rights welcomes your manuscript submissions
> on
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> institutions, and gender and minority rights. The editors, Mashood Baderin
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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Lala Murari Lal Chharia Oriental Series. No.I, II, Srimad Bhagawatam

 
 
 
 
 

 

Srimad

 
 

Lala  Murari Lal Chharia Oriental Series No.1.     Vol.I   

 

Lala Murari Lal Chharia Oriental Series No.2   VolI

 

 

 

 

 

Srimad Bhagavatam

 

 

 

with the text of

 

Sridhar

 

 

 with

 

 

Visisitaadvaita   and  Dvaita Readings

 

 

 

Vol.II

 

 

 

Skandhas   8- 12

 

 

 

Edited by

 

T.R.Krishnacharya

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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