Needham's Indian Network traces the attempts to create a space for the disciplinary history of science in India in the first few decades after Independence. It does so by narrating the efforts of an important transnational network of historians and historians of science who attempted to institutionalize the history of science in India during the 1950s - a crucial decade as far as science and technology in India are concerned. An important part of this network was the remarkable intellectual and historian of science, Joseph Needham. This book delineates, for the first time, the connections between Needham and Indian historians of science as well as his lasting influence on many of them.
During the first decade in the life of a newly independent nation, historians of science like A.Rahman tried to develop a curriculum for undergraduate and graduate teaching, while reflecting on the prioritization of research themes and programmes, and the central concerns of the historiography of science. With its narrative located at the end of the Second World War and the first decade of decolonization, this book also focuses on the problematic nature of the historiography of science and its relation with theories of modernity and modernization that were central to the projects of nation building.
Author(s): Dhruv Raina
Series: New perspectives on Indian pasts
Edition: FIRST EDITION
Publisher: YODA PRESS
Year: 2015
Language: English
Pages: 145
City: NEW DELHI
Preface and Acknowledgements ix
1. Introduction 1
2. Inaugurating the Disciplinary History of Science 18
3. An Embarrassing Controversy 53
4. The Needhamian Network in India 70
5. Epilogue 110
Bibliography 123
Index 137