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A Desire for Meaning: Ḳhān-i Ārzū’s Philology and the Place of India in the Eighteenth-Century Persianate World

Mirza Firuz Shah
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Reference ARC-1000001-2272

Book Information

Subject Literature
Subclass Timured/Mughal (Literature)
Year 1800.0
Volume 1
Edition N/A
Publisher & Place N/A
Publisher Date N/A
ISBN 10|13 N/A

Description

During the early-modern period, Persian was the language of the imperial court and a prestigious literary medium in South Asia. Not only did Persian connect the Subcontinent with intellectual and cultural trends across western and central Asia, but during the early-modern period, India—even compared with Iran—was arguably the world’s main center for the patronage of Persian literature and scholarship. However, our understanding of the societal role of Indo-Persian (that is, Persian used in South Asia) is still hazy in part because the end of Persian as a language of power in India has been so historiographically over-determined. Colonial intellectuals

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