Established in 1969, Manohar is a publishing house and a bookseller serving individuals and libraries. We export books by mail and have a bookstore at Ansari Road in Delhi. Manohar initially sold only rare and out of print publications, but soon branched out into local sale/export of new books published in India, and then into publishing of scholarly works under its own imprint.
09 December, 2012
Against The Current: Volume II: Fixing Tariffs, Finance and Competition for the Power Sector in India
Against The Current: Volume II: Fixing Tariffs, Finance and Competition
for the Power Sector in India
By- Joël Ruet (ed)
A non-starter for years, reforms of the power sector in India has finally started. In relation to the country’s growth and general economic buoyancy, the power sector has not only been slow with its reforms, but is also impeding the furthering and fostering of general reforms. In that respect, delays in reform not only bear a cost in terms of budgetary and human resource, but also in terms of credibility and opportunity. Every delay worsens the situation and the margin for wider option reduces. Some opportunities that are missed today will remain irremediably so.
An articulate vision makes a pivotal difference and this is now the time of understanding (i) the organizational tasks, (ii) the tariff aspects, (iii) the role of the private sector, (iv) the role of technology in the complex, variegated, state-specific, Indian scenario. This new volume in the series, Against the Current deals with tariffs and the effective role of the private sector, and offers analyses by specialists and practitioners of different disciplines. The objective is to give leads for creation of a diversity suitable to face challenges of a post-developmentalist running of the power sector.
This book includes studies and papers presented and discussed at a seminar jointly organized by the Centre de Sciences Humaines and the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur in September 2003.
Joël Ruet is Marie Curie Research Fellow at the London School of Economics and Associate Researcher, CERNA, Ecole des Mines, Paris and teaches in Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. He has specialized in the study of economic reforms of the Infrastructure and Urban sectors in India.
ISBN 978-81-7304-684-1 2005 194p. Rs.500/Pounds 35
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07 December, 2012
A Practical Sanskrit dictionary: With Transliteration, Accentuation, and Etymological Analysis Throughout
A Practical Sanskrit dictionary: With Transliteration, Accentuation, and
Etymological
Analysis
Throughout
By- Arthur Anthony Macdonell
This classic work by a renowned scholar has several
advantages over other similar works because of its distinct features.
It is much more copious than other lexicons for
Sanskrit students. It contains nearly double as much material as other Sanskrit
works of the same character.
Another merit of the work is that it is the only one
of its kind that is transliterated and can thus be used with advantage by
comparative philologists not conversant with the Devanagari Alphabet.
Further it is etymological in character and gives a
derivative analysis of all the words it contains. This enhances its utility
from a linguistic point of view and its practical value to the students. It
would help the students better remember the meanings of words once they are
equipped with their derivation.
Lastly it is the only lexicon of its type that
indicates not only with respect to words, but also to their meanings, the
literary period to which they belong and the frequency or rarity of their
occurrence—a feature which is so important for both the scholars and the
students.
Arthur A.
Macdonell’s services to the study and research of Sanskrit literature are
too well known to need any introduction and too vast and varied to be covered
in brief. From writing a Sanskrit Grammar to preparing a Vedic Index, he has
indebted the students and scholars of Sanskrit alike, in many ways.
Macdonell was educated at the University at
Gottingen, Universities of Leipzig and Tubingen, and Oxford University. He was
Boden Professor of Sanskrit and Keeper of the Indian Institute, Oxford. He was
elected Fellow of Royal Danish Academy; Fellow of the British Academy, Vice-President
of Council of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
His published works include: Sarvanukramani of the
Rigveda (1886); A Practical Sanskrit-English Dictionary (1892); Vedic Mythology
(1897); A History of Sanskrit Literature (1900); Brihaddevata (1904); Vedic
Grammar (1910); Vedic Index of Names and Subjects (1912); A Vedic Grammar for
Students (1916); A Vedic Reader for Students (1917).
ISBN 978-81-7304-303-1 2005 396p.
Rs.550/Pounds 95
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05 December, 2012
A Gateway from the Eastern Mediterranean to India : The Red Sea in Antiquity
A Gateway from the Eastern Mediterranean to India : The Red Sea in Antiquity
By- Marie-Francoise Boussac and Jean-Francois Salles
(eds)
Published in association with
Maison De L’orient Mediterraneen, Jean Pouilloux
Inter-disciplinary studies about the connections
between India and the Mediterranean world in antiquity have been growing in the
last few decades. These have followed a range of
approaches. This book focuses on one segment of the maritime world geographically defined as the Red Sea and its surrounding areas. This regional perspective is necessary to understand the dynamics of exchange.
approaches. This book focuses on one segment of the maritime world geographically defined as the Red Sea and its surrounding areas. This regional perspective is necessary to understand the dynamics of exchange.
A large number of texts in Greek and Latin, papyri,
ostraca, stone inscriptions, archaeological excavations and surveys especially
at sites such as Berenike and Myos Hormos provide a wealth of data on
historical development in the Red Sea region.
Contributors to this volume are drawn from a variety
of disciplines such as philology, Egyptology, African studies, archaeology and
ancient history and base their papers on recent discoveries as well as
re-interpretation of textual sources.
Many of these papers first appeared in issues of the
French journal Topoi but on account of their importance to maritime history of
the Indian Ocean it was decided to publish them for a wider audience.
M.-F. Boussac is Professor in Greek History at Lille
University and Deputy Director of the French Mission at Mahasthangarh in
Bangladesh. She is currently in-charge of excavations at Taposiris—a
Graeco-Roman site in Egypt, near Alexandria. She continues to edit Topoi
devoted to the Mediterranean world and its linkages with Asia.
J.-F. Salles is Research Director, French National
Centre for Scientific Research and is now in-charge of the Jordan Branch of the
French Institute for Near East (IFPO, Amman). He was Director of Maison de
l’Orient Méditerranéen,
Lyon until 1999 and in-charge of the French Mission at Mahasthangarh in
Bangladesh until December 2004.
He has specialized in the archaeology of the Gulf,
especially from the mid-first millennium bc
to the mid-first millennium ad.
His publications include excavation reports on archaeological sites in the
Gulf, as also contributions to major international journals.
ISBN 978-81-7304-570-7 2005 270p.
Rs.675/Pounds 60
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03 December, 2012
A Concise Encyclopaedia of North Indian Peasant Life : Being a compilation from the writings of William Crooke, J.R. Reid and G.A. Grierson South Asian Colonial Archive: I
A Concise Encyclopaedia of North Indian Peasant Life :
Being a compilation from the writings
of William Crooke, J.R. Reid and G.A. Grierson South Asian Colonial Archive: I
By- Shahid Amin (ed)
During the late nineteenth-century British officials,
often doubling as scholar-collectors, created a huge and variegated ‘colonial
archive’, collecting, arranging and recasting information about ‘The Natives of
India’ into compendia for ready reference and administrative recall. Taking
these neglected official materials on peasant and rural life, the distinguished
historian Shahid Amin has fashioned a new synthesis, one that interrogates the
colonial understanding of rural Indians with an insider’s historical
inflections. Amin’s Concise Encyclopaedia weaves an intricate tapestry of
crops, seasons, products, beliefs, ceremonies, aphorisms and folk adages,
showcasing all the while the multiple dimensions of rural life, and the
unlikely but enduring threads that bind and sustain the peasant world.
In this Encyclopaedia, Amin has reproduced and
engaged with the text of Crooke’s Glossary, Reid’s famous description of the
agricultural calendar and of his little known compilation of a peasant
dictionary. He also incorporates and works with selections from Grierson’s
voluminous writings on language and literature to explore the issues of
‘rusticity’, ‘simplicity’ and ‘wisdom’ that characterize much of rural life. A
marked feature of this work is the constant dialogue that the editor sets up
between the late-nineteenth century colonial experts and the contemporary
historian, one with a sure grasp both of the colonial archive as well as
popular culture and idiom of contemporary north Indian peasant life. Amin’s
scholarly, incisive and lucid introduction, coupled with his additions and
explanatory footnotes are enriched by rare colour plates and line drawings.
Together these enable the reader, both scholar and lay person, to understand
better Both peasant life and culture, and the Ways of colonial ethnography.
Shahid Amin
is Professor of History at the University of Delhi. A founding member of the
Subaltern Studies Collective, Professor Amin has been a Fellow at the Stanford
Humanities Center, Shelby Cullom Davies Center, Princeton University and the
Institute of Advanced Studies, Berlin, and Visiting Professor at the Univesity
of Chicago. Among his publications are Event, Metaphor, Memory: Chauri Chaura,
1922-1992 (Delhi and Berkeley, 1995).
ISBN 978-81-7304-597-4 2005 596p.
Rs.2250/Pounds 125
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02 December, 2012
The Indian Entrepreneur: A Sociological Profile of Businessmen and Their Practices
The Indian Entrepreneur: A Sociological Profile of Businessmen and Their Practices
By- Bruno Dorin (ed)
Drawing a sociological profile of the Indian
entrepreneur is an ambitious and tricky task. India is a world of diversities,
and the same is true in its corporate world. Some great Indian businessmen
developed worldwide activities, while others confined themselves to the local
market. They may be deeply attached to the traditions of their religious or
caste community, whereas others are very westernized and have been so for
generations. They may be heirs to an hundred-year old family business, or
self-made men whose affairs flourished within a few years. They may have
studied in prestigious business schools, or given up their studies rather
early. In order to have an overview of these various universes, and also to
provide a practical guide of key names and concepts, this book focuses on three
different levels; the socio-cultural world (family, community and
value-concepts in India), the politics of business (history and strategy of
five Indian industrial empires) and the employer in his enterprise
(international leather shoemakers in the southern state of Tamil Nadu).
Bruno Dorin,
French socio-economist and former Director of the CSH (1995-1999), lived 8
years in India where he conducted various research programmes on contemporary
Indian economy and society.
ISBN
81-7304-477-5 2003
172p. Rs.400/Pounds 45
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30 November, 2012
The Good Country: Individual, Situation and Society in Saurashtra
The Good Country: Individual, Situation and Society in Saurashtra
By- Harald Tambs-Lyche
Dealing with Saurashtra, a complex but little studied part of western India, this book extends monographic treatment to an entire region, and thereby reveals the dynamic and changing nature of relations between castes. Town, village and hamlet all participate as backgrounds for the image people in Saurashtra have of their society, while the ever-present past informs them of the past itinerary of present groups, and provides a diachronic perspective on the power relations that inform the system and pervades the consciousness of the regional population. Their knowledge of society extends both through changing relations over time and variation within the region. Though considerable, such knowledge is always and necessarily partial. Constant but differing efforts are made to relate such knowledge to the precepts of caste society as structuring the image of the whole. But such efforts are made by people who are differently situated, and who construct contradictory images, of which the most important, traditionally, are those emanating from the feudal past, and those linked to the merchant communities. Thus caste cannot fruitfully be seen as a single structure, in static and synchronic terms. By analysing interaction in various settings, the author shows how the encounters of daily life are embedded in the rank consciousness peculiar to India, while difference is constantly underscored in hierarchizing discourse. In this study, the individual emerges as an agent of the hierarchical order, with an image of the self just as individual as his Western counterpart though differently constructed.
Harald Tambs-Lyche received his Ph.D. from the Univesity of Bergen in 1972. After early work on Indian immigrants in Europe, he has worked on Saurashtra since 1973, and has published a volume on the emergence of its traditional society: Power, Profit and Poetry (Manohar, 1997); and edited a collection of articles on The Feminine Sacred in South Asia (Manohar, 1999), A study of Scandinavian missionaries among the Santals, in collaboration with Marine Carrin, is being prepared for publication. He is presently working on ethnic and religious revitalization in Karnataka, and a Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Picardie–Jules Verne, Amiens, France.
ISBN 978-81-7304-417-5 2004 354p. Rs.795/Pounds 55
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25 November, 2012
The Forging of Nationhood
The Forging of Nationhood
By- Gyanendra Pandey and Peter Geschiere (eds.)
Unlike most writings on nationalism, and the related
concepts of development and modernity, this book is the product of a
conversation begun among historians of the South—or what used to be known as
the ‘Third World’. It shows how much there is to learn about these facets of
the modern world from closer attention to the experience of the directly or
indirectly colonized parts of Asia, Africa, the Caribbean and Latin America
and, no less importantly, from direct interaction between scholars from these
regions.
The notions of nationhood and liberal development
have been disseminated so successfully in recent times that they have come to
be viewed almost as ‘natural’. It is easy to forget how long and difficult the
struggle has been to establish ideas of popular sovereignty and individual
equality as universally applicable rights. For, as this book demonstrates, the
rhetoric of the inclusive claims of liberty and equality that nationalism and
other related movements promote is accompanied by the practice of exluding
numerous classes, communities and individuals from precisely these claims. This
happens to be the case both within, and across, nations. Indeed, the story of
nationalism and of modern ‘civilization’ could scarcely have been written
without such exclusions.
Several papers in this volume show how members of
excluded groups can suffer from nationalism’s impatience with difference, and
conclude with the hope of reforming the nation state. Yet their collective
contributions also suggest that the concept of the essential, cultural
nation—and perhaps therefore the idea of the nation itself, as it has been
handed down to us—needs serious questioning; and with that of course the existing
forms of the modern state.
Gyanendra
Pandey was Professor of History at the University of Delhi from 1986 to
1998, before moving to his present position as Professor of History and
Anthropology at the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA.
Peter
Geschiere taught History and Anthropology at the Free University
(Amsterdam), the Erasmus University (Rotterdam) and the EHESS
(Paris/Marseille). At present he is Professor of African Anthropology at Leiden
University and the University of Amsterdam.
ISBN
81-7304-425-2 2003 304p.
Rs.500/Pounds 50
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