Merchants of Virtue: Hindus, Muslims, and Untouchables in Eighteenth-Century South Asia

Merchants of Virtue: Hindus, Muslims, and Untouchables in Eighteenth-Century South Asia
Merchants of Virtue explores the question of what it meant to be Hindu in precolonial South Asia. Divya Cherian presents a fine-grained study of everyday life and local politics in the kingdom of Marwar in eighteenth-century western India to uncover how merchants enforced their caste ideals of vegetarianism and bodily austerity as universal markers of Hindu identity. Using legal strategies and alliances with elites, these merchants successfully remade the category of “Hindu,” setting it in contrast to “Untouchable” in a process that reconfigured Hinduism in caste terms. In a history pertinent to understanding India today, Cherian establishes the centrality of caste to the early-modern Hindu self and to its imagination of inadmissible others.

Author/Editor

Divya Cherian

Publisher

University of California Press

ISBN

9780520390058

Publication date

1 Dec 2022 – 31 Jan 2023

Specialisation

Humanities

Theme

Society
Religion
Law
History
Globalisation

Region

South Asia
India