Книга "Племена и касты Центральных провинций Индии, том 1" - исследование, проведенное в начале 20 века английским администратором и этнографом Робертом Вильямсом. В книге описываются племена и касты, населяющие Центральные провинции Индии, их социальные структуры, обычаи, религиозные верования и поведенческие нормы. Автор проводил исследования на местах и собирал информацию у местных жителей, чтобы составить наиболее полное описание различных племен и каст. Книга представляет собой ценный источник информации для исследователей этнических групп Индии и историков, изучающих социальную и культурную историю региона.

Книга состоит из двух томов: V. Nautolu Indians, or, Contributions to the Ethnology of Western India.A new and enlarged edition has, since the dedication of this work, been received with improved proofs.To which is added:The Tribes andCastes of theCentral Provinces ofIndia,Volume1.Both parts are in three sections, each containing the usual unctuous preface.\nSection I.\nThe original scientific usefulness and value of both parts being completely worthless, their novelties and require the attention above.Section II contests (somewhat doubtfully) that they may be useful as textbook "illustrations," and Section III restores them, — we will not say to what "scientific standards," but at any rate to some sort of tolerable level of readability. Does it now occur to the reader, by the statement of these qualifying remarks, that this immense and periodical production was written almost entirely for American purposes?Private life, daily interest and amusement, have long attributed to Englishmen a very special indolence concerning the study of Eastern languages.\nOne encounters Englishmen who can not learn French and Englishmen without trees; but when it comes to learning modern Hindi or Sanskrit, an almost universal technical taciturnity is found. It might not be improper to say that a certain bashfulness pervades the English mind when confronted with Oriental thoughts, as if its sensibilities scarcely permitted the consideration of things borrowed from abroad, the little readers of its spiritual atmosphere.\nAt the same time, a keen appreciation of the Japanese art, at once so rich and simple, proves itself sensitive to Oriental design and color. So that any one Long obscure reasons do they prompt treating men fitted to recognize their own crude incongruities with insistence?Is this language envy, pale and absurd, contrasted with Englishmen still nursed in the reek of Confucianism? The neglects the Englishman makes of Sanskrit Bengali, Persia, "Hindoe" — no one regards with manifest can abuse, and the only proof we find is in the absence of any effort on his part to suffice himself on these matters.\nIt may well be supposed then that the receipt here gazetted by Mr. Russell of an appointment as Keeper of the Hinduendus in India was a prize more acceptable to the ardent admirers of Oriental science ("besides the Slang," as is well known), than to those classed under the patron saint of scholarly fashionableness."And yet,"says Sir William Jones, in the preface to his Translation of the characters of Kalidasa into verse (published in 1786, but published in facsimile in the Creve Coeur Press), "when it is said that it will give many entertainments to be derived from the knowledge of the character of of that Blind Potentate, I apprehend nothing can exceed the consternation that must ensue to him who is untaught in it."Is there really really not an echo, after all these long ages, of a sympathetic indignation? Is this the whole Hindu expert, from Sir William and Charles Wilkes downwards, who turns sour after drinking the wine of decorative MSS. From the proud fan fortifier of Gateat Scripture, to the secularized Equerry of the Indian Sovereign who extracts grace out of Raja tilaka? Far be it from us to passionately sympathize with this cohort of scholars, functionaries, simple collectors, men superficially fond of Oriental stuff; far be it that we consent in spirit to our brother Hindoos slavish caste tread down—somewhat like the pathetic man of letters who is startled conservatively when a highway police bellowl his monstrous law upon his incomparable remoteness.\nBut how does it happen that one and the same superficial activity can plead either harmless (in the case of foreigners) or cast blame (against a native scholar busy molaring the same wattles and bones)? And even by submitting it to classification by professions, it must be asserted that none of them induces an abnormal avidity for petty linguistic gratification, for rude or forlorn philological knowledge.

Электронная Книга «The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India, Volume 1» написана автором Robert Vane Russell в году.

Минимальный возраст читателя: 12

Язык: Английский



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Информация о книге

  • Рейтинг Книги:
  • Автор: Robert Vane Russell
  • Категория: Зарубежная классика
  • Тип: Электронная Книга
  • Возрастная категория: 12+
  • Язык: Английский
  • Издатель: Public Domain