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OverviewIn spite of the way in which the rise and development of a wide range of different religious communities have affected the course of South Asian history, we still know very little about how and why these communities developed in the way they did, why they experienced different rates of growth and why some of them are larger and more influential than others. The answer to these questions lies, at least in part, in the rise and growth of conversion movements involving changes in communal affiliation. But what is conversion and what are conversion movements? What do conversion movements have in common and how do they differ from one another? How have they spread and why have they taken place? What have been their effects on society and how do religions, losing adherents, attempt to reverse the process? These and other issues are raised and discussed by a number of scholars, most of whom are resident in Australia. What they have to say should be of interest, not only to historians, students of religion and social scientists in general, but to all those attempting to understand some of the more vital and fundamental forces at work in South Asian?society?today. Full Product DetailsAuthor: G.A. OddiePublisher: Manohar Books Imprint: Manohar Books Weight: 0.700kg ISBN: 9780700701032ISBN 10: 0700701036 Pages: 212 Publication Date: 15 June 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsG.A. Oddie Introduction 1 — S.A.A. Rizvi Islamic Proselytization (Seventh to Sixteenth Centuries) 13 — D.B. Forrester The Depresses Classes and Conversion to Christianity, 1860-1960 35 — G.A. Oddie Christian Conversion among Non-Brahmans in Andhra Pradesh with Special Reference to the Dornakal Diocese c. 1900-1936 67 — W. Garlington The Baha’I Faith in Malwa 101 — Eleanor Zelliot The Psychological Dimension of the Buddhist Movement in India 119 — J.T.F. Jordens Reconversion to Hinduism, the Shuddhi of the Arya Samaj 145 — S. Arasaratnam The Christian of Ceylon and Nationalist Politics 163 — Kitsiri Malalgoda Buddhism in Post-Independence Sri Lanka 183 Appendix A, B, C 192 Index 195ReviewsAuthor InformationGeoffrey A. Oddie is an Honorary Associate in the Department of History, University of Sydney. He has taught in India as well as in Australia and was a visiting fellow at JNU, New Delhi. His works include Popular Religion, Elites and Reform: Hook Swinging and its Prohibition in Colonial India, 1800-1891 (1995); Imagined Hinduism: British Protestant Missionary Constructions of Hinduism, 1793-1900 (2006), (Hindi translation 2019) and Series Editor of Hinduism in India: Modern and Contemporary Movements (2016) and Hinduism?in?India:?The?Early?Period?(2017). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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