Prophetic Maharaja, 9780231214490
Paperback
Lost kingdom, exiled king, a people’s struggle to reclaim hope.

Prophetic Maharaja

loss, sovereignty, and the sikh tradition in colonial south asia

$53.59

  • Paperback

    288 pages

  • Release Date

    9 September 2024

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Summary

The Lost Kingdom: Maharaja Duleep Singh and the Sikh Struggle for Sovereignty

How do traditions and peoples grapple with loss, particularly when it is of such magnitude that it defies the possibility of recovery or restoration? Rajbir Singh Judge offers new ways to understand loss and the limits of history by considering Maharaja Duleep Singh and his struggle during the 1880s to reestablish Sikh rule, the lost Khalsa Raj, in Punjab.

Sikh sovereignty in what is today northern…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780231214490
ISBN-10:0231214499
Series:Religion, Culture, and Public Life
Author:Rajbir Singh Judge
Publisher:Columbia University Press
Imprint:Columbia University Press
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:288
Release Date:9 September 2024
Weight:412g
Dimensions:229mm x 152mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

This dazzling work of historical scholarship demonstrates that while history can never be truly and completely narrated, it can be contemplated in ways that open up a space for deeper understanding and insight. * Choice Reviews *Rajbir Singh Judge’s dazzling monograph Prophetic Maharaja presents an argument for “dwelling in loss” rather than seeking the enticing yet entrapping desires for restoration, recovery, and healing. [The book] is in many ways a model and master seminar in bringing together invasive attention to the particularity of an archive and theoretical reflection that paves as well as shifts the terrain of multiple fields of knowledge simultaneously. – SherAli Tareen * An Und Für Sich *Instead of a history of Sikh loss, bounded and secured, Prophetic Maharaja opens onto the problematic of loss: where loss itself can be lost, along with the historical horizon. – Basit Kareem Iqbal * An Und Für Sich *This book is also a remarkable reading of Sikhi, Sikh ethical teachings, which helps frame how we can understand the motivations of Duleep Singh and his supporters, and also the relationship between communities and their pasts. In refusing coherence and recuperation Judge offers glimpses of contingent futures imagined by Duleep Singh’s supporters, plumbing the “epistemic murk” of the colonial archives explored in the book. – Purnima Dhavan * Contending Modernities *Instead of a history of Sikh loss, bounded and secured, Prophetic Maharaja opens onto the problematic of loss: where loss itself can be lost, along with the historical horizon. – Basit Kareem Iqbal * An Und Für Sich *Prophetic Maharaja is a remarkable book. In its treatment of a late nineteenth-century moment in the history of Sikh claims for sovereignty in the Punjab, it refuses conventional historical approaches that fix the identities of colonizers and colonized, instead insisting that things like community, religion, politics, and the boundaries between them are always sites of contest and negotiation. In detailing those conflicted processes as they cohere and destabilize political relationships, Rajbir Singh Judge offers a model of how theorized history can be compellingly and intelligently written. – Joan W. Scott, author of On the Judgment of HistoryFocusing on the results of the British conquest of the nineteenth-century Sikh kingdom in Punjab, Rajbir Singh Judge provides a thought-provoking discussion of what it means to lose a political-religious tradition. This splendid book should be read not only by those interested in South Asia but also and especially by those open to exploring the potential insights to be gained by the mutual provocations of theology and psychoanalysis. – Talal Asad, author of Secular Translations: Nation-State, Modern Self, and Calculative ReasonBeautifully written and expertly theorized, Prophetic Maharaja takes up the image of Maharaja Duleep Singh and its position in Sikh memory as a placeholder for lost Sikh sovereignty. Cautioning against a melancholic attachment to a supposedly authentic past, Judge explores the core relationship between loss and sovereignty, centering a distinctively Sikh understanding of sovereignty. – Deepti Misri, author of Beyond Partition: Gender, Violence, and Representation in Postcolonial IndiaWhat scale of time is necessitated by the emergency of loss? In this scintillating book, Rajbir Singh Judge attends to the rhythms of loss and refigures psychoanalysis as a tradition of the oppressed. With Duleep Singh, he invites us to “the impossibility of history,” better known as prophecy. – Gil Anidjar, author of On the Sovereignty of MothersMeticulously researched and theoretically rich, Prophetic Maharaja is a haunting postcolonial exploration of the Sikh desire for sovereignty. Questioning, informing, gripping: a revelatory history! – Nikky-Guninder Kaur Singh, author of The Birth of the Khalsa: A Feminist Re-Memory of Sikh Identity

About The Author

Rajbir Singh Judge

Rajbir Singh Judge is an assistant professor of history at California State University, Long Beach.

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