Science and Technology in Colonial India

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This book is a significant contribution to the socio-political history of science and technology in India, combining a wholistic perspective with a strong regional flavour. It revolves around two basic issues. First is the role of science and technology in empire-building in Asia, specifically in India, and financing its maintenance through maximum exploitation of its human, natural, agricultural and other resources by launching and executing a number of exploratory projects, termed as ‘field sciences’. Such an imperial focus was undergirded by a crucial objective; the acquisition of hegemony through social control based on intimate knowledge of horizontal and vertical divisions in lndian society around the axes of religion and caste. Formalised as colonial ethnography by the administrators, it was institutionalised as a discipline in the British universities. Second concerns the decoding of the complex response of the Indian intelligentsia including the English-educated as well as the experts and advocates of classical and regional languages which were the key to indigenous knowledge in indigenous sciences, arts and literature. The book also discusses the innovative use of print technology by Arya Samaj in recasting Hindu consciousness and its alternative of seeking historical guidelines in the past.

Author(s): Kamlesh Mohan
Publisher: Routledge/Aakar
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 175
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Colonial Ethnography: Imperial Pursuit of Knowledge for Hegemony in British India (Late Nineteenth to Early Twentieth Century)
Chapter 2: The Development of Modern Sciences in the Panjab University under Colonial Rule, 1882-1947
Chapter 3: Technology and Religion: Recasting Hindu Consciousness Through Print in India with Special Reference to the Punjab During the Nineteenth Century
Chapter 4: Ruchi Ram Sahni and the Pursuit of Science in a Colonial Society
Index