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The University of Arizona (UA) is committed to ensuring an accessible and inclusive experience for students, employees and all who use University technology and resources. If you require a captioned version of this video, please reach [email protected] If you are interested in an upcoming CMES talk and require captions, please reach out to the above-listed email. CMES staff will work with the Disability Resource Center to ensure that captions are done either at the time (if it is a live-streaming event) or that captions will be done immediately for a video used in furtherance of classroom activities. Filmed by University of Arizona's Center for Middle Eastern Studies on 9/23/2016. MENAS Colloquium Series cmes.arizona.edu/colloquium Richard M. Eaton, Professor, History, UA The writing of India's late medieval early modern history has been bedeviled by an excessive focus on religion, in particular, Hindu-Muslim conflict. It is as though the past thousand years of South Asian history has been written backwards, with the whole of it a serving merely as a prolonged and bloody prelude to the bitter Partition of 1947, which divided the subcontinent into an explicitly Muslim Pakistan and predominantly Hindu Republic of India. This talk proposes a new way of viewing the period 1000-1800, commonly mis-labled the subcontinent’s “Muslim era.” In particular, it proposes to analyze, compare, and contrast the socio-cultural worlds produced by two trans-regional literary traditions, Persian and Sanskrit, suggesting that the idea of the “cosmopolis” is a far more useful category precolonial history than is the threadbare, flawed and more limiting one of religion.