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OSMANIA UNIVERSITY (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   093929


State of the union: India faces demands for Telangana / Jane's   Journal Article
Jane's Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
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2
ID:   093092


Worldly vernacular: Urdu at Osmania uiversity / Datla, Kavita   Journal Article
Datla, Kavita Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Twinned as Urdu has become with the fate of India's largest religious minority, Muslims, and with the emergence of the independent state of Pakistan, for which Urdu is the official national language, the story of Urdu holds a peculiar place and a special significance in histories of the subcontinent. Stories of the Urdu language are dramatic, bound up as they are in questions of politics, the fate of Hindus and Muslims and the vicissitudes of both the Urdu and the Hindi languages. Though Hindi-Urdu language politics are an important part of these languages' colonial history, this article emphasizes another story. For, like the other vernaculars of south Asia, Urdu had to contend as much with English as with Hindi, and it is that story that is emphasized here. This article details how early-twentieth-century Hyderabad's Urdu educators engaged with questions of native education, language, and Western science. It highlights the discussions and disagreements that accompanied this educational project as Urdu advocates re-evaluated their language and its sources of authority, attempting to make the Urdu language a worldly vernacular, useful for more than the subcontinent's Muslim population.
Key Words Muslim  Vernacular  Urdu  Osmania University  Hindus 
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