India Rediscovered Re-Assessing the Legacy of Alexander Cunningham
$69.00
Author: | Edited by Atul Tripathi |
ISBN 13: | 9788173056857 |
Binding: | Hardbound |
Language: | English |
Year: | 2023 |
Subject: | Art and Archaeology/Archaeology |
About the Book
Alexander Cunningham, a great scholar, archaeologist and art historian, contributed immensely to the cause of Indian art and archaeology. He is rightly hailed as the ‘Father of Indian Archaeology’. He was among the first to acknowledge the role of textual scholarship, particularly in understanding the sites of ancient India and paid particular attention to sculptural art and epigraphic records. His efforts to trace Buddhist history through the architectural remains greatly impacted the consolidation of Buddhist religious identity. He was perhaps the earliest art historian to advance an evolutionary model to study Indian temple architecture. The present study provides a critical and comparative analysis of his work. Though Cunningham is criticized for his ‘text-aided’ approach, the influence of Buddhist sites and his obsession with Chinese pilgrims, yet his grand contribution to preserving Indian art and heritage cannot be ignored.
The volume containing 16 articles is an outcome of the effort to bring into print the proceedings of the International Seminar on ‘Sir Alexander Cunningham and the Art Heritage of India’ organized by the Department of History of Art, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, to mark Cunningham’s bicentenary year, and to re-assess his contribution to the cause of Indian art and archaeology.
The book is enriched by the contributions of some highly acclaimed scholars in their respective fields. It will be useful to history, historiography, and heritage-related academia and to the general reader interested to know more about Cunningham and the history of our heritage.
CONTENTS: Preface
Contributors
1. Re-assessing Alexander Cunningham
— Upinder Singh
2. Alexander Cunningham, James Prinsep and
Varanasi
— O.P. Kejariwal
3. Alexander Cunningham and Indian
Numismatics
— Sanjay Garg
4. Sir Alexander Cunningham and the Journey
of Indian Archaeology: With Special Reference
to Sarnath
— B.R. Mani
5. Contribution of Alexander Cunningham to
the Study of Indian Architecture: With
Special Reference to Gupta Temples and
the Temples of Gwalior Fort
— Amar Singh
6. Sir Alexander Cunningham and the
Archaeology of Indian Temple Architecture
— Pushpa Tiwari
7. Revisiting Gandhara through the Lens of
Xuanzang, Alexander Cunningham and
Alfred Foucher
— Suchandra Ghosh
8. Writings on Historical Geography of Bengal: A Survey
— Sarita Khettry
9. Xuanzang’s Travels in Gujarat and the Vadnagar Monastery
— Y.S. Rawat
10. Provenance, Journey and Present Status of the Buddha’s
Alms-bowl: Cunningham’s Research and Further Reflections
— Siddharth Singh
11. Alexander Cunningham’s Gift to the Connoisseurs of
Sculptural and Performing Art: Bharhut Railings –
Discovery and Preservation
— Iravati
12. Redefining the Date and Association of Bharhut Sculptures:
In the Light of Cunningham’s Report and Contemporary Researches
— Ajit Kumar
13. The Reign of Dialectic in the Approaches of Cunningham:
An Art Historiographical Perspective
— Vipul Tiwari
14. Following Xuanzang’s Trail: How Alexander Cunningham
Retrieves Xuanzang’s Itinerary through Central India in
His The Ancient Geography of India, Buddhist Period (1871)
— Pallavee Gokhale
15. Paradigm Shift in the Study of Art and Archaeology in India
since Alexander Cunningham
— Vibha Tripathi
16. Reviewing Temple Architecture of Lalitpur: As Expounded
by Cunningham and Later Researchers
— Rajendra Yadav & Subhash Chandra Yadav
Appendix
In His Own Words: Alexander Cunningham’s Introduction
to ASI Reports (Vol. I, 1871)
Index
ABOUT THE EDITOR: Professor Atul Tripathi is a Professor and Head of the Department of History of Art and Tourism Management at Banaras Hindu University. Before this, he taught at the Department of History and Culture, Gujarat Vidyapeeth, Ahmedabad, as Lecturer and Reader, for over a decade. He specializes in the history of ancient and early medieval Indian architecture, sculpture and iconography.
He has received several prestigious awards, completed several valuable research projects, and is presently engaged in the IoE Incentive Grant, B.H.U. (MoE, Govt. of India) sponsored project entitled “Developing a Digital Archive of the Art Heritage of Varanasi (Newly Discovered Group of Ancient Temples and Musical Traditions of Varanasi)”. He has extensively published research papers in national and international journals and presented scores of papers at conferences both in India and abroad.