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The Dialectics of Resistance: Colonial Geography, Bengali Literati and the Racial Mapping of Indian Identity*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 November 2009
Abstract
Through a study of hitherto unexplored geography textbooks written in Bengali between 1845 and 1880, this paper traces the evolution of a geographic information system related to ethnicity, race, and space. This geographic information system impacted the mentality of emerging educated elites in colonial India who studied in the newly established colonial schools and played a critical role in developing and articulating ideas of the territorial nation-state and the rights of citizenship in India. The Bengali Hindu literati believed that the higher location of India in such a constructed hierarchy of civilizations could strengthen their claims to rights of citizenship and self-government. These nineteenth century geography textbooks asserted clearly that high caste Hindus constituted the core ethnicity of colonial Indian society and all others were resident outsiders. This knowledge system, rooted in geography/ethnicity/race/space, and related to the hierarchy of civilizations, informed the Bengali intelligentsia's notion of core ethnicity in the future nation-state in India with Hindu elites at its ethnic core.
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- Modern Asian Studies , Volume 44 , Issue 1: The politics of work, family and community in India , January 2010 , pp. 53 - 79
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References
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35 For example, W.S. Atkinson, Director of Public Instruction of Bengal wrote to a school inspector in 1863: ‘[Y]ou will be good enough to pay particular attention to the manner in which geography is taught in the several classes of the schools visited by you. . . . Wherever maps are wanted I shall be always ready to sanction grants for the purchase of them’, West Bengal State Archives, General Department Education Branch, Progs A 23 March 1863. W.S. Atkinson Esq., Director of Public Instruction to S.W. Fallon Esq., Inspector of Schools, North West Division. (No. 996, 16 March, 1863).
36 It would be nearly impossible to survey all geography textbooks that developed in different Indian languages in the late-nineteenth century. Tamil, Bengali, Hindi, Urdu, and Marathi were the most important linguistic vehicles of articulation for new geographic ideas in India. However, this paper concentrates on Bengali to provide glimpses of the evolution of such intellectual discourses in India.
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