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Settling the frontier: Land, law and society in the Peshawar Valley, 1500-1900.

机译:解决边界:白沙瓦河谷的土地,法律和社会,1500-1900年。

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摘要

Over several centuries (c. 1500-1900) residents of the agrarian valleys west of the Indus river in the Peshawar region (in today's Northwest Frontier Province of Pakistan) experienced imperial expansion, technological innovation, and the growth of state institutions as they simultaneously nurtured and transformed indigenous power relations, socio-cultural practices, and a political economy never completely distanced from an earlier pastoral-nomadic heritage. Tracing local agency and adaptation, this study recovers a regional history long subsumed in imperial and post-colonial national narratives. It argues against reductive notions of a unified "tribal" society in simple, perpetual opposition to monolithic imperial-state structures. A creative methodology has supplemented conventional sources with the use and analysis of social science scholarship, ethnographic material, religious and lineage texts, oral histories, and collections of popular verse.; Through the period under study a focus has been maintained on Peshawar "settled" district relations to the land and upon often contending visions of social order, justice, and moral authority. Personal, family, and clan identities and fortunes were closely tied to control of village fields and crop production. Islamic, imperial, and lineage claims to legitimacy were directly tied to assertions of particular norms of behavior and the right to interpret and administer justice. Though imperial hierarchies and ruling institutions attempted to further structure and subordinate local society, a process accelerating in the late 19th century, colonial documents reveal the extent to which such efforts revealed a "Limited Raj" in which political and economic domination did not fully translate into socio-cultural influence or legitimacy. Related processes of transformation and exploitation have been examined in historical context.; Local collaboration and resistance as well as imperial reticence and initiative marked different moments in continuing processes of interaction. Periods of religiously charged political activism are analyzed as occurring within a larger socio-economic context dominated by the influence of local elite intermediaries and imperial resources and strategies. A contingent, fragmented history reflected neither the dichotomies of problematic "subaltern" scholarship nor the effects of socio-cultural and religious expression delinked from the dynamics of the regional political economy.
机译:在白沙瓦地区(今天的西北边境省)的印度河西部的农业谷地上的几个世纪(大约1500-1900年)的居民经历了帝国扩张,技术创新以及国家机构的发展,同时进行了培育并改变了原住民的权力关系,社会文化习俗和政治经济学,这与早期的游牧游牧文化从来没有完全分开。通过研究当地机构和适应,这项研究恢复了长期以来在帝国和后殖民国家叙事中都包含的地区历史。它反对以单一的,永久的,反对整体式帝国主义结构的统一的“部落”社会的简化概念。一种创造性的方法通过使用和分析社会科学奖学金,人种学材料,宗教和世系文本,口述历史以及流行诗集来补充常规资源。在本研究期间,人们一直将重点放在白沙瓦与土地的“结算”地区关系上,以及对社会秩序,正义和道德权威的经常争辩的观点上。个人,家庭和家族的身份和命运与控制村田和农作物生产密切相关。伊斯兰,帝国和宗族对合法性的主张直接与对特定行为规范的主张以及解释和执行正义的权利直接相关。尽管帝国等级制和统治机构试图进一步建构和服从地方社会,但这一进程在19世纪后期加速了,但殖民文献显示,这种努力在多大程度上揭示了“有限的拉杰”,在其中,政治和经济统治并未完全转化为社会文化影响或合法性。在历史背景下研究了相关的转型和开发过程。地方合作和抵抗以及帝国的沉默和主动性标志着持续互动过程中的不同时刻。宗教信仰的政治行动主义时期被分析为是在较大的社会经济环境中发生的,主要受当地精英中介机构和帝国资源和战略的影响。偶然的,零散的历史既没有反映出有问题的“次要”学术的二分法,也没有反映出与区域政治经济的动力脱节的社会文化和宗教表达的影响。

著录项

  • 作者

    Nichols, Robert.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Pennsylvania.;

  • 授予单位 University of Pennsylvania.;
  • 学科 History Asia Australia and Oceania.; History Middle Eastern.; Folklore.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 1997
  • 页码 355 p.
  • 总页数 355
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 世界史;亚洲史;世界文学;
  • 关键词

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