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"The most explicit statement of immigration into the Subcontinent."
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Ram Sharan SharmaRam Sharan Sharma
Ram Sharan Sharma
Ram Sharan Sharma was a Marxist historian and Indologist who specialised in the history of Ancient and early Medieval India. He taught at Patna University and Delhi University (1973–85) and was visiting faculty at University of Toronto (1965–1966). He also was a senior fellow at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. He was a University Grants Commission National Fellow
"The most explicit statement of immigration into the Subcontinent."
"R.S. Sharmas whose Indian Feudalism has misguided virtually all historians of the period, not only because it it entirely written from the a priori assumption of the dark age, doggedly searching for point by point parallels with Europe, but also, ... because there has never been anything to challenge it... Sharma has repeated his views innumerable times - almost verbatim often, and hardly developing them... Sharmas thesis "involves an obstinate attempt to find elements which fit a preconceived picture of what should have happened in India because it happened in Europe (or is alleged to have happened in Europe by Sharma and his school of historians whose knowledge of European history is rudimentary and completely outdated) or because of the antiquated Marxist scheme of a ‘necessary’ development of ‘feudalism’ out of ‘slavery’. The methodological underpinnings of Sharmas work are in fact so thin that one wonders why, for so long, Sharmas colleagues have called his work pioneering. It generated a spate of ‘feudalism studies’, elaborating Sharma’s thesis, differing perhaps on minor points, as the case maybe, and critical here and there of ‘the inadequacy of the data’, but remaining variations on a theme.... There are, as indicated before, a very few authors whose work effectively addresses the feudalism thesis in a critical manner... Sharma, for one, appears to have been in no mood to take heed of criticism levelled at his work. Under the impact of the feudalism thesis the historiography of the period is still in utter disarray."