India Discovered : The Recovery of a Lost Civilization

John Keay
4.1
262 ratings 42 reviews
Two hundred years ago, India was seen as a place with little history and less culture.Today it is revered for a notable prehistory, a magnificent classical age and a cultural tradition unique in both character and continuity. How this extraordinary change in perception came about is the subject of this fascinating book. The story, here reconstructed for the first time, is one of painstaking scholarship primed by a succession of sensational discoveries. The excitement of unearthing a city twice as old as Rome, the realization that the Buddha was not a god but a historical figure, the glories of a literature as rich as anything known in Europe, the drama of encountering a veritable Sistine chapel deep in the jungle, and the sheer delight of categorizing 'the most glorious galaxy of monuments in the world' fell, for the most part, to men who were officials of the British Raj. Their response to the unfamiliar -- the explicitly sexual statuary, the incomprehensible scripts, the enigmatic architecture -- and the revelations which resulted, revolutionized ideas not just about India but about civilization as a white man's prerogative. A companion volume by the author of the highly praised A History and The Great Arc.
Genres: HistoryIndiaNonfictionIndian LiteratureTravel
221 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
90 (34%)
4 star
116 (44%)
3 star
50 (19%)
2 star
3 (1%)
1 star
3 (1%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by John Keay

Lists with this book