Description
The Language of History presents a revolutionary approach to understanding pre-modern Indian history by examining Sanskrit narratives of Muslim pasts. Audrey Truschke demonstrates how Sanskrit texts, often overlooked in historical scholarship, provide crucial insights into how Hindu scholars and writers conceptualized and recorded Muslim rule and culture in India.
Through meticulous analysis of Sanskrit sources, Truschke reveals sophisticated narratives that complicate simplistic Hindu-Muslim binaries. She shows how Sanskrit authors engaged with Muslim political authority, cultural practices, and religious traditions, creating complex historical accounts that defy modern categorizations.
This scholarly work reshapes our understanding of Indo-Islamic history and the intellectual traditions that sustained cross-cultural dialogue in medieval South Asia. Essential for historians, South Asian studies scholars, and anyone interested in how different cultures document shared histories.







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