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The great novelist and thinker Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay (183894), associated with his famous hymn ‘Vande Mataram, is sometimes seen as mainly a creator of Hindu nationalist icons. This is unfortunate, for Bankim was an enormously learned man, a deep and subtle thinker. A relatively unknown side of his work comprises his religious and philosophical thought, in particular his carefully argued ideas on Hinduism.This collection of Bankims writingsmany translated into English for the first time and excerpted from the authors Complete Works in the Bengali originalbrings out some of the inner anxieties and ambivalence within the novelist-intellectuals work on religion, ethics, and philosophy. By reading this book one may detect in Bankim a rational-functionalist approach to religion, as also a deepening faith and piety transcending that intellectual perspective. Bankim anticipates contemporary scholarship in claiming that Hinduism is the common name given to a variety of religious thoughts and practices; and yet, paradoxically, his writingsall penned in the colonial era of Indian subjecthoodalso argue for a common Hindu heritage, as well as a unified religious and cultural world for contemporary Hindus. A substantive Introduction and detailed annotations help to situate Bankims life and thought in his times.
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