"This balanced and critical biography of a Marathi-Christian activist, preacher, thinker, and writer makes a splendid contribution to our understanding of Christianity in India. By an accomplished historical anthropologist, its Indo-centric perspectives are fresh, fascinating, and altogether compelling. The result is a remarkable display of cultural hybridity." Robert Eric Frykenberg, Professor Emeritus of History & South Asian Studies, University of Wisconsin - Madison, USA ".a persuasive study of Baba Padmanji, a remarkable Maharashtrian convert to Christianity in the era of high colonialism. Dandekar brilliantly showcases Padmanji's legacy as an educationalist, reformer, novelist, feminist and modern Indian. [his] vernacularization of Protestantism. and quest for Christian faith.
is a befitting critique of Western scholarship on the Enlightenment." Padma Anagol, Reader in Modern Indian History and Director, Centre for Asian Studies, Cardiff Wales, UK. "Dandekar continues her astute and timely study of the intersection of literature, religion, and Christian conversion in nineteenth-century India through this new biography and intellectual history of Baba Padmanji and the 'vernacular missionary field'. She eloquently shows how bhakti or devotionalism was harnessed to express a modern Indian Christian conviction that asserted Christianity was the only real means toward radical social progress" Christian Novetzke, Professor of International Studies and Comparative Religion, University of Washington, USA. "This captivating biography of Baba Padmanji integrates the study of religious conversion, cultural politics, and book printing in Maharasthra. Dandekar brings to light a vernacular Christian tradition that has been ignored or suppressed in missionary and nationalist discourse. At a time when minorities in India are vilified as members of "foreign" religions, this book makes a timely intervention." Chandra Mallampalli, Fletcher Jones Foundation Chair of Social Sciences, Westmont College, USA.
"Dandekar's critical reading of Baba Padmanji's prolific Marathi writings offers an excellent intervention in current scholarship on nineteenth-century Christian literature in Indian languages. Her study brings to life the intellectual contributions of this controversial and polemic figure by juxtaposing Marathi literary history and social reform debates with Christian conversion and feminism, a task seldom undertaken. Particularly valuable is her attention to various genres of Padmanji's ouvre to investigate his shaping of a Protestant vernacular discourse in response to various interlocutors." Hephzibah Israel, Senior Lecturer in Translation Studies, School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures, University of Edinburgh, UK.