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- Jeff
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The book is of outstanding interest - both authors lived in all more than 90 years in a continent whom they tried to understand - not in vain.
This book represents in a certain sense the key to Indian manners and customs the Indians themselves sometimes seem to have lost ...
* In 2002 came out a German translation with commentary
In the course of more than 30 years as a missionary among the people of India, Abbe Dubois found ample opportunity to observe and record Hindu practices. His first manuscript on Hindu religion and sociology, written in French, was completed in 1806. This comprehensive, annotated translation of Dubois's 1815 thorough revision of his work was completed by Henry K. Beauchamp in 1897 and revised in 1905. It offers a rare glimpse of a little known culture, and is a unique historical document of anthropological interest.
The first of three parts begins with a finely delineated view of Indian society, including commentary on the origin, divisions, and "advantages" of the caste system; the mythical origin of the Brahmins; descriptions of gurus or Hindu priests; and an explanation of the ceremonies of the Brahmins and other castes. Part 11 describes the four states of Brahminical life. It features discussions of the rules of conduct and etiquette; external and internal defilements; marriages between Brahmins and other Hindus; fasting; religious tolerance; Hindu ornaments; Brahmin wives and rules of conduct for married women; conditions of widowhood and funeral ceremonies; and samples of Hindu fables, tales, and poetry.
The final part considers, among other topics, the Hindu religion, including its feasts, temples, principal gods, and worship of animals and inanimate objects; the administration of civil and criminal justice; and the Hindu military system. Six appendices with supplementary information on distinctions of caste, rules of conduct, and other topics conclude this monumental work, a certain source of fascination for students. scholars, and anyone intrigued by Indian life and culture.
Dover (2002) unabridged republication of the third English language edition, published by Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1905. Prefaces. Prefatory Note by Max Muller. Editor's Introduction. Index. 6 Appendices. 1 blackand white illustration. xxxiv+741pp. 533k x 8'1/2. Paperbound.
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What we didn't know until Sylvia Murrs detective-like analysis of manuscripts: the late Abbé (1766-1848) had a ghostwriter - he owned an older manuscript of the Ex-Jesuit Coeurdoux (+ 1691-1779), a brilliant scholar of Indian customs and lifelong observer of his exotic environment. Dubois added to his model many sociological and ethnical observations - a real teamwork ...
The book is of outstanding interest - both authors lived in all more than 90 years in a continent whom they tried to understand - not in vain.
This book represents in a certain sense the key to Indian manners and customs the Indians themselves sometimes seem to have lost ...
* In 2002 there came out a German translation with commentary
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She can't turn down her creature comforts, even when it means sacrificing her "true love," her Romeo, for an older, but more solvent, lover, in instance after instance.
Manon is one of the first unsympathetic heroines in literature (let's forget about Eve if we can) , a precursor of Emma Bovary in many respects. Let's also remember that she appears in during the , "golden age" of sentimental fiction in France and Europe generally (the ealry 1700s) . Women are depicted in this era as archetypically virtuous and angelic, or unambiguously sexual (thinking particularly of the late Restoration English stage). What we have in Manon is an amalgam, neither entirely saint, nor entirely sinner. She is the Madonna and the Magdaleine, part angel, part succubus, but an entirely new persona on the European literary stage. This is the reason that she had such an impression on the European artistic imagination. She represents a new dichotomy, a new figure that represents what Henry Adams would have suggested as a representation of the sacred and the profane, the mud and the cathedral.
The complete failure of the book to express the workings of political patronage at that time has again led it up a cul-de-sac from which there is no return.
This book will be of no interest to any real political or social historian and indeed may actually compromise the perceptions of political or social students seeking enlightenment.
The factual basis of the book is frequently faulty will glaring errors and omissions.
I do not endorse this book
There is first the author's inexplicable need to quote extensively in French thruout this book. I don't read French and fail to understand why the author writes in English and quotes extensively in another language. Then it struck me - he is a learned man, being educated in the humanities in English, French and presumably, Latin as well (says so in his background).
then there is his use of words which do not even occur in any dictionary, thesaurus or great books on organised words that I consulted. I guess that he was making a synedochic point about words and grammar.
Finally, his analysis on the one famous painting about the battle of Eylau bu Gros and that green clad Prussian soldier with the wild look in the corner of the painting. Ah, that I understand except that he got it wrong. That's a russian soldier being depicted.
He'll need to brush up on his military history if he wants a career outside of art criticism.
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