From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Hardiman is a historian of
modern India and a founding member of the
subaltern studies group.
[1]
[2] Born in
Rawalpindi in
Pakistan, Hardiman was brought up in
England where he graduated from the
London School of Economics in 1970 and received his D.Phil. in
South Asian History from the
University of Sussex in 1975.
[1]
[3] He is an Emeritus professor of the Department of History at the
University of Warwick.
[4]
Selected publications
- Noncooperation in India: Nonviolent Strategy and Protest 1920-22, Hurst, London 2020.
- The Nonviolent Struggle for Indian Freedom 1905–19, Hurst, London 2018.
- Medical Marginality in South Asia: Situating Subaltern Therapeutics , (edited with Projit Mukharji ),
Routledge, 2012.
ISBN
978-0-415-50241-2
- Missionaries and their Medicine: A Christian Modernity for Tribal India , Manchester University press,
Manchester, 2008.
ISBN
978-0-7190-9539-9
- Gandhi in his Time and Ours, Permanent Black,
New Delhi, 2003; Hurst, London,
Columbia University Press, New York and Natal University Press, Durban, 2004.
ISBN
8178240548 /
ISBN
9788178240541
- Peasant Resistance in India (edited collection with long introductory essay by D.H.),
Oxford University Press , New Delhi 1992 (paperback edition 1994).
ISBN
0195633903 /
ISBN
978-0195633900
- Subaltern Studies VIII: Essays in Honour of
Ranajit Guha (edited with
David Arnold), Oxford University Press,
New Delhi 1994 (paperback editions 1996,1997,1999).
ISBN
0195637216 /
ISBN
978-0195637212
References