Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Social Geography Ahmad , Aijazuddin

By: Ahmad , AijazuddinLanguage: Eng Publication details: New Delhi Rawat publication 2019 Edition: 1st reprinted EditionDescription: 454p. Hard BoundISBN: 978-81-7033-542-9Subject(s): Social Geography of India, Origin of Social Geography, Tribe, Caste, Language, Religion, Overview of Social GeographyDDC classification: 910.102
Contents:
This book has grown out of the author’s involvement in the teaching of social geography over the last two decades. It makes an approach towards a social-geographical interpretation of India. The critical elements of the complex social phenomena that defined India today or at any other point of time in our long history have received detailed attention in this work. Focusing on elements of social identity, such as ethnicity, tribe, caste, language and religion, the work evaluates these parameters of Indian identity in a spatial frame. Admittedly, not much work has been done on the spatial organization of Indian society and its social structure as expressed in identities such as ethnicity, tribe, caste, community, language, dialect and religion at the grassroots level, although broad all-India outlines are discernible in stray research. The present work seems to serve two main purposes: First, it reconstructs the broader outlines at the all-India level, disaggregating the data wherever possible upto the regional levels. Secondly, it presents data in a historical context, thus demonstrating how crucial the spatial dimension is in understanding the socio-cultural evolution of the Indian people, as well as in realizing the significance of the socio-cultural diversity in the functioning of the federal polity in India today. About the Author Aijazuddin Ahmad is a geographer with a brilliant academic record and notable professional achievements. He retired as Professor of Geography from the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, where he served at the Centre for the Study of Regional Development from 1972 to 1997. He also taught at the Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, during the period 1962-1972. His earlier published works include: Demographic Transition, Social Structure and Regional Development, Mountain Population Pressure, An Atlas of Tribal India and The Valley of Kashmir.
Summary: This book has grown out of the author's involvement in the teaching of social geography over the last two decades. It makes an approach towards a social geographical interpretation of India. The critical elements of the complex social phenomena that defined India today or at any other point of time in our long history have received detailed attention in this work. Focusing on elements of social identity, such as ethnicity, tribe, caste, language and religion, the work evaluates these parameters of Indian identity in a spatial frame. Admittedly, not much work has been done on the spatial organization of Indian society and its social structure as expressed in identities such as ethnicity, tribe, caste, community, language, dialect and religion at the grassroots level, although broad all India outlines are discernible in stray research. The present work seems to serve two main purposes: First, it reconstructs the broader outlines at the all-India level, disaggregating the data wherever possible upto the regional levels.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Vol info Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Books Books HPSMs Ganpat Parsekar College of Education, Harmal
HPS-Physical Geography
HPS-GEOGRAPHY 910.102 AHM / SOC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) - 1 Available 11 Shelf HPS-4119

This book has grown out of the author’s involvement in the teaching of social geography over the last two decades. It makes an approach towards a social-geographical interpretation of India. The critical elements of the complex social phenomena that defined India today or at any other point of time in our long history have received detailed attention in this work. Focusing on elements of social identity, such as ethnicity, tribe, caste, language and religion, the work evaluates these parameters of Indian identity in a spatial frame. Admittedly, not much work has been done on the spatial organization of Indian society and its social structure as expressed in identities such as ethnicity, tribe, caste, community, language, dialect and religion at the grassroots level, although broad all-India outlines are discernible in stray research. The present work seems to serve two main purposes: First, it reconstructs the broader outlines at the all-India level, disaggregating the data wherever possible upto the regional levels. Secondly, it presents data in a historical context, thus demonstrating how crucial the spatial dimension is in understanding the socio-cultural evolution of the Indian people, as well as in realizing the significance of the socio-cultural diversity in the functioning of the federal polity in India today.

About the Author
Aijazuddin Ahmad is a geographer with a brilliant academic record and notable professional achievements. He retired as Professor of Geography from the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, where he served at the Centre for the Study of Regional Development from 1972 to 1997. He also taught at the Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, during the period 1962-1972. His earlier published works include: Demographic Transition, Social Structure and Regional Development, Mountain Population Pressure, An Atlas of Tribal India and The Valley of Kashmir.

This book has grown out of the author's involvement in the teaching of social geography over the last two decades. It makes an approach towards a social geographical interpretation of India. The critical elements of the complex social phenomena that defined India today or at any other point of time in our long history have received detailed attention in this work. Focusing on elements of social identity, such as ethnicity, tribe, caste, language and religion, the work evaluates these parameters of Indian identity in a spatial frame. Admittedly, not much work has been done on the spatial organization of Indian society and its social structure as expressed in identities such as ethnicity, tribe, caste, community, language, dialect and religion at the grassroots level, although broad all India outlines are discernible in stray research. The present work seems to serve two main purposes: First, it reconstructs the broader outlines at the all-India level, disaggregating the data wherever possible upto the regional levels.

English

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

Powered by Koha