'This rich collection of essays pluralizes our understandings of modernity by offering new conceptual frameworks and empirically grounded analyses of alternative modernities. The contributions, all by well-known scholars, show how differently the world was experienced and constructed across time and space in Asia.' -- Anand Yang, Professor & Chair, Department of History, University of Washington, author of Bazaar India: Markets, Society, and the Colonial State in Bihar (U of California Press, 1999) and coeditor of a multi-volume New Oxford World History series published by Oxford University Press. 'This is an excellent collection of essays on India, China, and beyond by some of the outstanding scholars in the field. The book offers insights into a wide range of topics, from issues of modernity to circulatory history. It also presents innovative methodologies to study and understand Asia through comparative and connected frameworks. The book will appeal not only to historians and anthropologists, but also to those interested in the religious, philosophical as well as the political traditions of Asia.' --Tansen Sen, Director of the Center for Global Asia and Professor of History at NYU Shanghai and Global Network Professor at NYU, author of Buddhism, Diplomacy, and Trade: The Realignment of India-China Relations, 600-1400 (U of Hawai'i Press, 2003); India, China, and the World: A Connected History (Rowman & Littlefield, 2017) 'From 'connected' to 'circulatory' and 'competitive' histories, this volume brings together a stellar cast of scholars, from across a range of disciplines, to provide alternative and vernacular accounts of modernity in China, India and Southeast Asia.
It provides a platform for conversations between 'alternative' modernities as southsouth dialogues, making it unnecessary for these conversations to be always mediated through the West. It is a timely venture and an ever more important one.' --Gurminder K Bhambra, Professor of Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies, University of Sussex, author of Rethinking Modernity: Postcolonialism and the Sociological Imagination (Palgrave, 2007); Connected Sociologies (Bloomsbury 2014) 'It is now abundantly clear that some of the deepest problems engendered by capitalist modernity cannot be solved only by the social, political and ethical categories associated with the modern west. Yet, while much scholary energy and effort have been expended on a small but dominant number of western traditions, little systematic research has been done to excavate the conceptual treasures of other non-western forms of life. Only when the resources of the critical traditions of India, Africa, China, Persia, Arab, and the Latin American subcontinent are imaginatively unearthed will we make headway towards addressing the pressing issues of our times and transform the social and political imaginaries of our crisis-ridden societies. This illumnating collection of essays on Indian and Chinese modernity will make an invaluable contribution towards that endeavor and is bound to become an indispensable guide to alternative modernities.' --Rajeev Bhargava, Professor, CSDS, Delhi, author of The Promise of India's Secular Democracy (OUP, 2010) and Secular States and Religious Diversity (UBC Press, Vancouver, 2013).