Hamlet (Philip Weller Texts) at Meripustak

Hamlet (Philip Weller Texts)

Books from same Author: ATTEWELL GUY

Books from same Publisher: Orient Blackswan Pvt. Ltd.

Related Category: Author List / Publisher List


  • Retail Price: ₹ 400/- [ 0.00% off ]

    Seller Price: ₹ 400

Sold By: T K Pandey      Click for Bulk Order

Offer 1: Get ₹ 111 extra discount on minimum ₹ 500 [Use Code: Bharat]

Offer 2: Get 0.00 % + Flat ₹ 100 discount on shopping of ₹ 1500 [Use Code: IND100]

Offer 3: Get 0.00 % + Flat ₹ 300 discount on shopping of ₹ 5000 [Use Code: MPSTK300]

Free Shipping (for orders above ₹ 499) *T&C apply.

In Stock

Shipping charge ₹ 75 for orders below 500



Click for International Orders
  • Provide Fastest Delivery

  • 100% Original Guaranteed
  • General Information  
    Author(s)ATTEWELL GUY
    PublisherOrient Blackswan Pvt. Ltd.
    ISBN9788125044949
    Pages332
    BindingHardback
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearJanuary 2007

    Description

    Orient Blackswan Pvt. Ltd. Hamlet (Philip Weller Texts) by ATTEWELL GUY

    Refiguring Unani Tibb examines the ways in which unani tibb reconstituted its identity in the light of modernising trends at the turn of the twentieth century in India. It brings out the heterogeneity of unani tibb in late colonial India that frequently defies its commonly ascribed label as a ‘traditional Muslim system’ of medicine. Through an analysis of interconnecting themes Guy Attewell draws attention to the tensions manifest in different spheres of unani activity as practitioners reconfigured their knowledge and practices through the prisms of biomedical concepts, language, nationalist and communitarian politics, changing social and moral norms, and colonial-inspired models of legitimacy. The book shows that while tibb has always been a cosmopolitan profession, the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries saw a fundamental transition from a principally localised, personalised practice to one that had to engage and be represented in a mass, public arena for status, recognition and custom. This transition, the book argues, was neither complete nor uniform. The study draws on a range of material in Urdu, Arabic and Persian, including texts, pamphlets and journals, in addition to archival records in Hyderabad and London, to draw out the complexity and contingency in the evolution of a plural and extraordinarily dynamic tradition of healing.