Introduction
On 19 January 1924, the poet, independence activist, and President of the Indian National Congress, Sarojini Naidu, addressed the East African branch of the INC in Mombassa.Footnote 1 The visit marked a growing determination on the part of the INC to internationalise its independence struggle, in part by using the Indian diaspora to produce and disseminate pro-independence propaganda in foreign capitals.Footnote 2 The Indian community in East Africa was an important constituency. By 1920 an estimated 30,000 Indians living in the region outnumbered the European community by about five to one.Footnote 3 Despite this numerical advantage, Indians found themselves subject to growing political and economic inequalities, reflected in a 1923 government ruling that maintained the racialised reservation system of the Kenyan Highlands for white European settlers, and overlooked the pre-existing racial segregation of Kenyan townships.Footnote 4 This was in addition to the enactment of the principal of communal electoral franchise, which threatened to divide the Indian community while limiting their representation on the Kenyan Legislative Council to just two seats.Footnote 5
It was to the principle of equality and justice that Sarojini Naidu appealed. But it was the means by which she made this appeal that is of concern to the argument in this paper. ‘I am standing today for the first time in my life’, she spoke, ‘on the soil of Africa, but none the less, I dare any man, of any nation, to challenge my statement that I stand on the traditional Colony of the Indian people. What makes tradition? What makes policy, what gives rights? What brings duty, what imposes responsibility? It is the historic connection of one race with another, of one country with another, and the longer the connection, the deeper the interest, the more the responsibility and the more indisputable the claim. It does not take a very learned student to realize that naturally and inevitably East Africa is one of the earliest legitimate colonial territories of the … surplus of the great Indian nation.’Footnote 6
Sarojini Naidu's views on the position that Indians held in East Africa, as inheritors of an Indian colonial tradition, raise questions as to the way that we study international thought. There can be no doubting the anti-colonial credentials of Naidu, her opposition to British imperial rule, or her commitment to the independence of India, but how can we explain the contradiction between her thoroughgoing anti-colonialism, with an apparently hierarchical conception of the occupation of political space? The response that Naidu simply had a different understanding of the term ‘colony’ merely begs the question as to what that understanding was. This article suggests that one answer can be found in the way that we approach intellectual history in the study of international thought.Footnote 7 The article draws upon ‘global’ intellectual history, and specifically the conceptual framework offered by ideas of intellectual ‘circulations’, mediators, and translations, bolstered through recent literature on the global history of knowledge.
Naidu's speech provides just one example of a wider body of Indian international thoughtFootnote 8 that has often been subsumed by the teleology of the nation, or by the essentialist categorisation of anti-colonial thought. As a result, the international thought of Indian activists, intellectuals, and scholars has often failed to connect with broader themes of international thinking that were apparent in the opening decades of the twentieth century. This is particularly striking given the often-peripatetic nature of leading Indian international thinkers, and also the transnational reach of the Indian diaspora through which Indian international consciousness was frequently shaped. This article seeks to bring Indian international thinkers more comprehensively into the global intellectual debate on world order, from which they have often been separated. An emphasis on that to which these scholars and activists were generally opposed – that is, imperialism – presents a substantialist analysis often framed in terms of ‘anti-colonialism’, or ‘anti-imperialism’, potentially occluding more detailed understandings of their work.Footnote 9 The article points in particular to the mixed registers of equality and hierarchy that were sometimes apparent in Indian international thought, and associated practices. Mixed registers that reflected both longer-standing traditions of hierarchy rooted in South Asian political thought, and also occasionally reflected back the imperial hierarchies that they sought to critique and overcome.
In so doing, the argument does not attempt to ‘call out’ these thinkers and activists as somehow also imperialist, but rather seeks to interrogate the more unexpected content of their ideas. I begin by outlining the basic contours of global intellectual history, showing how it maps onto recent efforts to address the Eurocentrism of the history international political thought. Following this I draw upon three ‘sites’ of Indian international political thought, connected by the common themes of diaspora and mobility: first, the question of the Indian diaspora and how it registered with scholars and independence activists, focusing on East Africa; second, the concept of ‘greater India’ and its intellectual acolytes; and third, the international political thought of the sociologist, Benoy Kumar Sarkar. The purpose here is not so much to reveal new understandings of these sites, which have been dealt with individually across a range of works in cognate disciplines.Footnote 10 Rather, by bringing these sites together the article speaks to the value of global intellectual history in its capacity to imagine new assemblages of international thought that broaden the scope of the history of international political thought without relying upon distinct categories defined in terms of ‘cultural’ otherness, or distinct intellectual trajectories. In short, global intellectual history offers an analytical framework that can reveal ‘global histories’ of international thought that are worthy of the name. Connecting these three sites is the common theme of mobility and diaspora, an empirical theme that gives analytical purchase to the concept of circulations borrowed from global intellectual history.
International thought, global intellectual history, and international relations
The study of international thought has previously been something of a late developer when it comes to its engagement with intellectual history. The political theorists among the ‘Cambridge School’ of contextualist intellectual historians naturally privileged the state and its domestic capacities, leaving international theory and thought underdeveloped – as famously acknowledged by Martin Wight.Footnote 11 The emergence of the ‘historiographical turn’ in the early 2000s has given way to a blossoming of histories of international political thought in recent years, sustained by contributions from intellectual history,Footnote 12 and an IR discipline more sympathetic to critical theoretical approaches and their attendant emphasis on linguistics, subjectivity, and the philosophy of history. Responding to the Eurocentric critique of the field, attention has increasingly turned to the extra-European world.Footnote 13 These are important developments, some of which have connected with what has been termed ‘global intellectual history’, although this has often been underspecified.
In simple terms, global intellectual history offers a response by intellectual historians to the ‘global history’ movement that gathered pace in the early 2000s. But what makes global intellectual history ‘global’? Samuel Moyn and Andrew Sartori provide a useful threefold heuristic.Footnote 14 Universalist interpretations continue the long-standing tradition of seeking to explain macro-historical or ‘global’ transformation through the mobilising power provided by thought. Hegelians provide a European example, but so too might Confucianist, black African cosmopolitan universalists, and (more recently) liberal universalists such as Francis Fukuyama.Footnote 15 Comparativists on the other hand, seek to compare ideas and thinkers across spaces and through time, broadening the geographic scope of intellectual comparison, and responding to the call ‘to attend to non-western intellectual histories with a rigor commensurate with the scholarship on Western intellectual histories’.Footnote 16 Recent work on ‘non-Western’ and ‘global’ international thought reflect such approaches, rightly seeking to address the Eurocentrism of the field.Footnote 17 One critique here however, is the potential for implicit or explicit analytical bifurcations delineating the world into categories of West/non-West, centre/periphery, and empire/colony, thereby viewing the world ‘through the colonial state's eyes and through its archive’.Footnote 18
Often ‘global’ operates as a shorthand for ‘extra-European’, giving the illusion of geographic diversity, while territorialising thinkers either through a teleology of the nation, or wider reterritorialisations of ‘Asian’, ‘Islamic’, or ‘Latin American’ regionalisms.Footnote 19 These categorisations are understandable, and in some ways unavoidable, but this should not be at the cost of restricting the intellectual agency of individual thinkers to think beyond the categories to which their work has been subsequently hitched. Ironically, such totalising interpretations contravene one of the original admonishments of the contextualist school of intellectual historians against the mythology of doctrines and coherence: ‘history becomes a pack of tricks we play on the dead’, with writers and thinkers attributed to thoughts and doctrines they may not have been intending to think, or lines of action they may not have intended to pursue.Footnote 20
As Frederick Cooper highlights, political mobilisations against empire developed more varied repertoires than those defined solely in terms of a community or nation, encompassing those mentioned above, as well as ‘attempts to reform and restructure the imperial unit itself, often by turning imperial ideology into a claim on the rulers of empire’,Footnote 21 or what has been termed ‘counter-preaching’.Footnote 22 So for instance, Adom Getachew's delineation of anti-colonial from imperial futures includes federalist visions of pan-Africanism,Footnote 23 yet these ideas were entangled with co-present debates that traversed imperial, colonised, and non-imperial worlds, including federalist notions of ‘greater Britain’, and ideas of the United States of India.Footnote 24 This need not detract from the power of anti-colonial renderings, but rather highlights ideas that traversed geographic and political boundaries. The ideal of ‘anti-colonial’ thought need not be taken as a set of ideas that ‘get up and do battle on their own behalf’.Footnote 25 The point here is not to dismiss such abstractions, but to ask how we might otherwise conceive of the intellectual histories behind them. This may mean considering other patterns through which these ideas moved around the world, exploring their dissemination across and between spaces that do not match current maps of power.Footnote 26 As a result we may find alternative means of understanding the development of international thought on a global scale.
The third approach to global intellectual history, which offers most to the analysis in this article, is to concentrate on ‘intermediaries, translations, and networks’; emphasising ‘an implicit holism according to which cultural, social, linguistic, civilizational, or geographical boundaries are always occupied by mediators and go-betweens who establish connections and traces that defy any preordained closure’.Footnote 27 For the purposes of this article we shall refer to these approaches under the general category of circulations.Footnote 28 Such an approach draws in part on postcolonial theory's interest in the colonising and hybridising processes through which knowledge accompanied imperial expansions.Footnote 29
In Homi Bhabba's terms then, ‘What is theoretically innovative, and politically crucial, is the need to think beyond narratives of originary and initial subjectivities and to focus on those moments or processes that are produced in the articulation of cultural differences. These “in-between” spaces provide the terrain for elaborating strategies of selfhood – singular or communal – that initiate new signs of identity, and innovative sites of collaboration, and contestation.’Footnote 30 To build on this, we might dissolve this coming together of its analytical priors rooted in essentialised identities, and question the teleological end point of ‘hybrid’ forms. The constitution of John Stuart Mill's ‘civilised’ states, Hobbes’ state of nature, and Grotius’ law of the sea, all depended on what George Steinmetz refers to as the ‘relational whole’ of imperial-colony relations – circulations of knowledge and experience, tied up in historical contexts that require excavation rather than simple categorisation.Footnote 31 These relations cut both ways. Rather than seeking to identify the essence of ‘Indian’ international thought in contrast to imperial thought, locating it within an ongoing, unequal, and power-laden dialogue allows us to identify commonalities including those relating to ideas of hierarchies of power.
The circulations approach also evokes the ‘histories from below’ tradition, including those that have demonstrated the constitutive effects of labour circulations on formations of class at a national and transnational scale, as highlighted in the first empirical example offered below.Footnote 32 More recent literature has stressed relational understandings of knowledge circulations: in-between spaces, contact zones, trading zones, and ‘cosmopolitan thought zones’.Footnote 33 Such works resist categorising intellectuals in terms of their spatial, cultural, economic, or political designations, thereby avoiding the trap of authenticity and notions of purity. Rather than a place ‘in between’, the intermediate evokes instead ‘the dynamic of being itself, as an open process of circulation and historicity’ – the intermediate has an ontological status of its own.Footnote 34 Rather than knowledge defined in terms of essence or location, it is understood ‘as a co-product, resulting from migration, colonial encounter and research travel’.Footnote 35
Such an ontology of ‘becoming’ does not seek to flatten hierarchy, nor deny power.Footnote 36 Indeed the very presence of hierarchies of knowledge and status can be productive of rearticulations of subjects and objects. For instance, Shruti Kapila shows how Indian revolutionaries adopted Herbert Spencer's sociological works as a means of advancing their claims to the inherently corrosive societal effects of imperialism.Footnote 37 Nalini Bhushan and Jay Garfield have shown how Indian philosophers articulated the ‘Bengal Renaissance’ through European vernaculars, in order to speak back to European philosophers who denied the validity of South Asian philosophical traditions.Footnote 38 In these cases, agents operating across difference could use knowledge and status hierarchies as a means of moving towards perceived goods, sometimes resulting in unexpected alliances – as the example of the East Africa Indian National Congress debates on Indians in Kenya demonstrates below.Footnote 39 In Ashis Nandy's terminology, we might view this as symptomatic of ‘colonised minds’, but we can also read Nandy in other ways, focusing instead on what he termed ‘defensive redefinitions’. As he puts it, the study of epistemic imperialism is not about dismissing the ‘gullible and hapless’ colonised intellectual sphere, but about calling attention to hegemonic knowledge, and the possibilities and limits of its subversion,Footnote 40 a variant perhaps of what elsewhere has been termed ‘epistemic insurgency’.Footnote 41
Such an approach allows greater agency to subordinated groups, and their capacity to productively navigate multiple hierarchies. One tactic here is what postcolonial theorists refer to as ‘strategic essentialism’: ‘provisionally accepting essentialist foundations for identity categories as a strategy for collective representation in order to pursue chosen political ends’.Footnote 42 Frequently, this results in a culturally essentialist narrative of (for instance) ‘Hindu’ variants of philosophical reflection, or ‘Indian’ conceptions of territorial space, as shown in the case of ‘greater India’, discussed below. The use of European exemplars and chronologies as a benchmark here was often a tactic of proving ‘Asian’ intellectual equivalence or even as a means of demonstrating the prior achievements of Asian thought ‘before Europe’ as it were; as the third section below on the international political thought of Benoy Kumar Sarkar also demonstrates.
We can conceive these sites as ‘cosmopolitan thought zones’, emerging ‘from the aspiration to build conceptual and linguistic bridges, through acts of translation and interpretation, often between highly different and politically unequal social communities in order to move towards a perceived good’.Footnote 43 This allows us to view such works as having ‘transgressed the colonial duality’,Footnote 44 beyond binaries of colonial/anti-colonial; imperial/internationalist; East/West; metropolitan/periphery; or universalist/particularlist, even when such works traded in these essentialist narratives. We may thereby understand how these texts operated as an assemblage of thought, irreducible to any single geography of knowledge, and yet comprehending the notion that global intellectual histories need not lose sight of their local contexts.Footnote 45
These three approaches to global intellectual history are already present in the history of international political thought to some degree, but not always explicitly so. Drawing upon histories of international thought from an Indian perspective, in what follows I offer three ‘sites’, linked by the common theme of mobility and diaspora, that show how the approaches offered by global intellectual history can lead to new interpretations of the movements, intellectual communities, and individual scholars contributing to what we can broadly term ‘Indian’ international thought.
‘Indians overseas’: The circulations of Indian international thought
Following the abolition of slavery within the British Empire in 1833, plantation owners in the colonies sought to address the resulting labour deficit by turning to indentured labour. In the Indian Ocean region, Indian labourers constituted a majority component. Criss-crossing the region, and reaching colonies beyond, was a vast circulatory labour network fuelling this ‘plantation complex’.Footnote 46 Alongside these networks were precolonial and paracolonial movements of merchants, traders, and religious communities whose presence not only predated European colonialism, but in some ways provided a foothold for it.Footnote 47 The plight of these communities was an ongoing source of activism in India, driving a demand for an independent Indian foreign policy long before independence; one that would represent and defend their interests.Footnote 48 Accordingly, among the principal influences on Indian international thought in the twentieth century was the long-standing presence and treatment of ‘Indians overseas’.
Frequently, when viewed from this perspective of South Asian international thought, world order in the early decades of the twentieth century was profoundly hierarchical – a story of imperial dominance, justified and sustained by hierarchies of capital, class, and race. Indian scholars working within the nascent field of political science, such as Benares Hindu University Political Scientist, S. V. Puntambekar, predicted the repartitioning of the world shaped by a new cohort of imperialist powers – Germany, Russia, and Japan – under a ‘racial, religious, cultural, or political order’.Footnote 49 His colleague, C. Narayan Menon, elaborated the ‘stages’ of exploitation evident across the colonies with political discrimination feeding economic discrimination. Referring specifically to the Kenya Highlands Order, which excluded Indian populations from land and political rights, he highlighted racial hierarchies that created a situation in which ‘Anarchist Jews professing no nationality have been welcomed but the brown citizens of the Empire are debarred’.Footnote 50
This racial persecution also motivated the concerns of scholar-practitioners. The origins of the satyagraha campaign of Mohandas Gandhi in the treatment of Indians in South Africa, provides a well-known example. But this was an ongoing concern of the India National Congress’ Foreign Department, and international affairs communities within India both before and after independence.Footnote 51 There was a narrative contact between Indians overseas and depictions of world order from the Indian perspective.
Yet these circulations were also productive of more varied repertoires of thought than those defined by simple imperial opposition. Early European explorers in East Africa were accustomed to the predominance of Indian merchants within regional coastal economies. The rupee was the currency of trade, and Indian-run trading houses connected ports to markets across the Indian Ocean littoral. As Winston Churchill remarked following his visit in 1907: ‘The Indian was here long before the British Official’.Footnote 52 Earlier representatives spoke of ‘two colonizations – Indian and European – with a shared role in “civilizing” the “native” population with East Africa offering the potential to become the ‘America of the Hindu’.Footnote 53 As British influence in East Africa grew, managing the competing interests of European, Indian, and ‘native’ communities came to feature in imperial policy debates as well as among Indian interest groups of various kinds. The aftermath of the Boer War, and then the First World War, both increased claims for European land occupancy – partly as a result of demobilisation – creating the conditions for a distinctly racialised debate over the relative status of ‘imperial subjects’ in colonies, particularly over rights to land and political representation. This produced an array of contradictory, but also sometimes complementary positions among Europeans and Indians alike.
By 1918, senior British officials were frankly assessing the viability of declaring the recently conquered territories of German East Africa, Tanganyika (Tanzania), as a colony for India. A policy memo, supported by the Secretary of State for India, E. S. Montagu, spoke favourably of the Indian ‘pioneer’, suited to the climate, and whose lower civilisational status relative to Europeans would better ‘civilise’ the African ‘native’, thus sharing ‘the White Man's Burden’.Footnote 54 Although rejected on grounds of principle by Gandhi, these proposals found favour with Gandhi's political mentor, Gopal Krishna Gokhale. Other prominent advocates included the leader of the Shi'a Isma'ili community, The Aga Khan, and ‘intermediary capitalists’ such as the prominent East African merchant Alibhai Mulla Jeevanjee.Footnote 55 These latter two ‘sub-imperialists’,Footnote 56 mediating between colony and empire, reflected back imperial hierarchies in their arguments, sometimes explicitly.Footnote 57 For The Aga Khan, Indian settlers induced a more effective ‘civilising effect’ on the ‘native’ by virtue of the Indian's lower civilisational standing relative to Europeans: ‘He [the African] does not in fact learn from the European planters’, he claimed, ‘because their methods are so far above his head.’Footnote 58 Both he and Jeevanjee traded in class hierarchies that justified the claim of Indian merchants to imperial citizenship on the grounds of their ‘well to do’ status, in contrast to the ‘lower classes’ of Indian labourers, who nonetheless were more fitted to the sanitary conditions of ‘native’ towns.Footnote 59
The Aga Khan's support for an Indian colony went beyond Tanganyika, envisaging a broader federation of East Africa. Here, he used the language of ‘imperial duty’.Footnote 60 Yet this was not simply a case of imperial cheerleading. We can read this discussion over the prospects of an Indian colony as a cosmopolitan thought zone. An aspiration for equal treatment for Indians produced shared ideas on an Indian role in imperialism that transgressed the colonial duality. In common with others who supported this project, the Aga Khan advocated for a ‘higher imperialism’, echoing Gokhale's earlier call for the recovery of the ‘true spirit’ of a more ‘noble imperialism’ that placed equality of citizenship above racial hierarchies.Footnote 61 These were examples of ‘counter-preaching’; turning imperial ideology into a claim on the rulers of empire.
By the late 1920s, the legal and constitutional position of these communities was of growing concern. The Hilton-Young Commission of 1927, called for by the then Colonial Secretary Leo Amery, considered the possibility of a ‘closer union’ or federation between the dependencies of East and Central Africa, including Kenya and Uganda. This threatened to shift the constitutional balance of the region in favour of European settler communities, while incorporating greater legislative representation for ‘native’ communities.Footnote 62 The sizable Indian communities therefore risked becoming further marginalised.
These events drew in the nascent Foreign Department of the INC and Jawaharlal Nehru himself, through the agency of U. K. Oza, a prominent publicist, editor, and activist on behalf of the East Africa Indian National Congress (EAINC). Oza argued for the consideration of ‘the whole question of our colonial policy … from the viewpoint of India’, reminding Nehru that the plight of Indians overseas reflected back on the independence struggle in India.Footnote 63 In the ensuing policy note, supported by a memorandum submitted by the EAINC to the Hilton-Young Commission, the stance of the Indian communities was clarified. Outlining their grievances, the memorandum described the long history of Indian settlement and ‘colonisation’ of East Africa, ‘one of the natural outlets for Indian expansion’, citing approvingly Lord Salisbury's late nineteenth-century call for an ‘intelligent and industrious race’ to populate the territory.Footnote 64 Responding to the racist anxieties of European settlers, the memo argued that Indian communities did not threaten European ‘culture and civilisation’ but rather could be seen as existing on a plane of civilisational equivalency with Europeans. As the report suggested, the ‘achievements of poets like Tagore, … of statesmen like Sastri and Sinha, of educationalists like Sir Sayed Ahmed, of industrialists like the Tatas, and of innumerable well-known Indian merchants, engineers and administrators’ proved their ability ‘to adapt the ancient civilization of India to the … modern world’ and ‘their right to a place in the front rank with the leaders of European civilization’.Footnote 65 Indeed, one concession that the EAINC offered to the commission was the acceptance of a ‘civilisation franchise’ whereby electoral representation was contingent upon an ability to read or write English, and possession of property of the value of at least £250.Footnote 66 Oza went further in suggesting that placating European fears and ensuring the ‘unalloyed preservation of their culture and civilization’ should in turn entail the defence of Indian ‘culture and civilisation’ against becoming ‘entirely Europeanised’.Footnote 67
According to the EAINC, the role of Indian communities in developing the colony was what justified their claim to an ‘important voice’ in any political changes in Kenya.Footnote 68 Their role in government service was one area of development, at least until ‘Africans … become competent to perform the duties now carried out by Indians.’Footnote 69 Indian Traders, meanwhile, were cast as ‘the pioneer of civilization’ ‘bringing new and desirable articles to the notice of the Natives, [creating in them] a desire to acquire such commodities and [stimulating] them to work harder and to better their condition.’Footnote 70 Indian communities were (according to Oza), ‘living side by side with a very imitative race of men’,Footnote 71 and ‘in closer touch with Natives than Europeans’,Footnote 72 justifying one of the central claims of the EAINC for a greater role in the administration of ‘native affairs’: on the land boards, the welfare portfolios of the Executive Council, and the Legislative Council.
The case of Indians in East Africa shows how circulations of labour communities and the racial cleavages this produced were exacerbated by imperial reform, laying the foundations for the navigation of this particular set of hierarchies. In this case, mobility and diaspora created a policy environment that demanded the confronting of the differential treatment of ‘Indians overseas’. But also one that required solutions (intellectually as well as politically) to the question of Indian land occupation in colonised spaces. These solutions tied together multiple political constituencies and agendas transnationally, as highlighted in the works of U. K. Oza, The Aga Khan, and Alibhai Mulla Jeevanjee. Such figures were placed in an intellectual and political intermediary position between imperialism and anti-colonialism. The EAINC and their affiliates were clearly opposed to East African federalism on the grounds that it presented a centralisation of power in the hands of a non-official majority of Europeans, yet the proposals of the closer union project to advance race relations through attending to ‘native’ development placed Indian communities as intermediaries, requiring them to reflect back a hierarchical imperial language of colonisation, civilisation, race, and class as a means of defending and advancing their own position.
One of the consequences of a circulatory approach to global intellectual history is that knowledge formations may take on different characteristics in different locations: they do not travel unchanged. Individual agents, scholars, knowledge entrepreneurs, activists, and thinkers differentially calibrate their messaging and ideas. This underscores a key contribution of circulatory approaches to international thought – an emphasis on multiplicities of interactions between knowledgeable agents continually adjusting their outputs to changed circumstances, audiences, and projects. As some historians of knowledge have implied, this presents knowledge as less a modular construction of individual elements being bolted together, but rather an assemblage of thought and practice, inherently provisional, evading stable categorisation, and shaped by multiple transactions with material and non-material elements.Footnote 73 The language of hierarchy in this case was partly a response to political necessity, but it also provides a reminder of the tensions of imperial rule for anti-colonial thought and action that can be better captured through a global intellectual history approach. These languages of hierarchy were evident elsewhere.
Imperialism, hierarchy, and ‘greater India’
One of the striking features of global international thought at the turn of the nineteenth century was the proliferation of meta-geographical imaginaries. These were produced in significant part through mobility and intellectual exchange. Though emerging at different times, the ‘pan’ movements (Pan-Asianism, Pan-Islamism, and Pan-Africanism) came about in part through ‘anti-Western’ transnational solidarities. As Cemil Aydin reminds us, however, Pan-Asianism would also produce imperial variants in the form of the Japanese co-prosperity sphere.Footnote 74 More straightforwardly imperial imaginaries were apparent in the reform movement of ‘greater Britain’, yet this too was a mobile imaginary echoing in ideas of greater Germany, greater Syria, and greater France.Footnote 75 Anti-imperial avatars were also apparent in the form of ‘greater India’, a spatial concept that seized the imagination of activists and intellectuals alike, continuing to resonate today in the Hindu nationalist rhetoric of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party.
Greater India was a polyvalent idea containing overlapping polemical and scholarly purposes, including overlaps with the presence and plight of the Indian diaspora. Many of those who wrote from the position of Indians overseas, including the labour networks explored in the previous section, echoed the idea of an expanded geographical zone of Indian consciousness and the shared cultural complex of India, the Gulf, and East Africa.Footnote 76 The Aga Khan, for instance, pointed to the ‘natural tendency toward external expansion on the part of the most advanced Indian races’ and that India had never been ‘self-contained’.Footnote 77 One early proponent was the later leader of the nationalist Hindu Mahasabha, Bhai Parmanand. Described in one account as an ‘Eastern Seely’,Footnote 78 Parmanand outlined his conception of greater India in a 1912 article in the Calcutta-based periodical Modern Review.Footnote 79 For him, ‘greater India’ was directly linked to the Indian diaspora, and in particular the ‘poor emigrants’ driven overseas to better themselves, in the process reaffirming ‘Hindu’ identity. Parmanand's vision derived from his own travelling epistemology, a result of the paracolonial circulations within which he moved, echoing – from a colonial standpoint – Greater Britain, Charles Dilke's 1868 travelogue that gave rise to the term.Footnote 80 As a leading member of the Bengali revolutionary group the Arya Samaj he had been an emissary to South Africa and Burma, before being exiled overseas, travelling to Europe, British Guiana, and eventually West Coast America where he helped to found the militant Ghadar network amid the disenfranchised immigrant labour communities of California. These experiences provide the backdrop to his advocacy of the labour diaspora and the establishing of overseas enclaves on behalf of Indians. After centuries of decline, accelerated by foreign occupation, Parmanand saw in the ‘colonisation’Footnote 81 by Indians of spaces elsewhere a path to the rejuvenation of India's national spirit. Channelling the ethos of what Manjapra has termed ‘swadeshi internationalism’,Footnote 82 he extolled the travelling virtues of this mobile community: ‘There is no national progress without foreign travel. Sea-sickness is the best national tonic.’Footnote 83
Parmanand provides an example of a type of exilic internationalist, produced – in this case – through his movements ‘in between’ imperial and extra-imperial circulations. But this was a genre of internationalism that also carried with it a sense of the local. Rather like the subjects of Benedict Anderson's study of Filipino anarchists, such figures often provided a vector for a form of transnational localism, a variant of what Tim Harper has termed the ‘village abroad’.Footnote 84 In contrast to the merchant elites of East Africa and their tacit approval of race, class, and civilisational hierarchies, for Parmanand this mobility resulted in a more communalist identity politics demanding the defence of specifically Hindu culture against the perceived ingress (particularly apparent in the colonies) of Christian orthodoxy – a set of ideas later adopted by the Hindu Mahasabha and ultimately the Hindu Nationalist BJP. Parmanand's hierarchical communalism, expressed as an international vision of ‘greater India’, was in this sense transnationally produced.
For others, such as the celebrated poet and prominent swadeshi internationalist Rabindranath Tagore, ‘greater India’ exhibited a more abstract and cosmopolitan vision of self-renewal through international contact. In his book Greater India, Tagore centred the metaphor of ‘the village’ as impoverished by colonial rule of the cultural nourishment of ‘the river’ of international engagement.Footnote 85 This he explored through a vernacular politics of conceptual translation – a cosmopolitan thought zone populated by concepts of state and society. Echoing the writings of other peripatetic revolutionaries, including Har DayalFootnote 86 and Bhai Parmanand, Tagore too lamented the crippling of the Samaj (social body) - the set of social institutions wherein lay the ‘heart of the nation’. This was to draw a distinction with England, to show that ‘the seat of life of different civilisations is differently placed in the body politic’.Footnote 87 For in England, ‘to save the state is to save the country, and for India to live is to preserve her social institutions.’Footnote 88 The privileging of the Sarkar (the government) as the overseer of societal functions had thereby established a state form that was a foreign entity, discordant with, and alienated from, the social institutions of the Samaj.
The solution, for Tagore, was to be found through a grand convocation of the mela (village meeting), conceived not as a turn to localism but as an international recovery of the ‘self’ and a reintegration into the universal: ‘The mela is the invitation of the village to the world into its cottage home. … the village forgets its narrowness … Just as in the rains the water-courses are filled with water from the sky, so in mela time the village heart is filled with the spirit of the Universal.’Footnote 89 Here Tagore was also enacting a travelling epistemology, a striving for a cosmopolitan universalism resulting from his extensive foreign travel and trips of cultural exchange.Footnote 90 Greater India, for Tagore, served a restorative purpose, overcoming isolationism through what Pan-Asianists would later term ‘cultural contact’, and a realisation of humanity's true ‘shakti’ (forces).
Tagore's vision of greater India corresponded to a wider scholarly movement that was also a product of global intellectual connections sparked in part by a desire among Indian scholars to transcend a perceived intellectual colonisation by specifically British intellectual mores. Those scholars associated with the Calcutta-based scholarly network the ‘greater India’ society, which included Rabindranath Tagore, forged strong connections with French Indologists, as Susan Bayly has shown.Footnote 91 Yet these intellectual ties reached beyond Europe, encompassing North America (especially anthropologists studying Pacific cultures at the University of Hawaii), South America, Japan, New Zealand, and Australia.Footnote 92
Kalidas Nag, one of the leading acolytes of the greater India society who had travelled with Tagore in his oceanic voyages of the mid-1920s, pursued the reclamation of India's status in universal history through more scholarly modes. This included India's claim to a spirit of internationalism, one that straddled the conceptual duality of ‘international’ and ‘imperial’ orders. For Nag, Indian internationalism was evident from the first recorded transcripts of the ancient Vedic texts, which preached ‘peace and spiritual unity’ in contrast to the ‘economic internationalism of exploitation’ or the ‘imperialistic internationalism of compulsion’.Footnote 93 This was aptly demonstrated in the ‘divine cosmopolitanism’ of the Buddha, and later in the ‘practical internationalism’ of the Ashokan dynasty. As he wrote:
Thus from the beginning of the Christian era, India started playing her role of internationalism not only through her lofty academic philosophy or through the vigorous propagation of a royal personality, but as a whole people following mysteriously a divine impulse, an ecstatic inspiration to sacrifice the Ego for the All. This grand movement of spiritual conquest, this noble dynamic of cultural imperialism – a legacy of Asoka [sic] – soon won for India the inalienable empire over the vast continent, right across Tibet and China to Corea [sic] and Japan on the one hand and across Burma and Indo-China to Java and Indonesia on the other. The history of this phenomenal progression … is full of profound lessons for students of internationalism.Footnote 94
(Re)claiming ‘international India’ thereby required a reckoning with India's imperial pasts, one narrated across the internationalism/imperialism binary. The position of the Ashokan empire between the Hellenic and Mongolian worlds was according to Nag, ‘the first great causeway of Love and Illumination between the Orient and the Occident, the first code of progressive imperialism and the first basis of constructive internationalism.’Footnote 95 In this account, the language of ‘cultural colonialism’ and ‘colonies’ was celebrated as part of a benevolent imperialism, fostering an internationalist spirit between strategically essentialised civilisations. The dialogue that such texts had with European anthropologists, Orientalists, and collators of ‘colonial knowledge’ also contributed to the recycling of Orientalist stereotypes and representations of the ‘other’.Footnote 96 Zoological modalities were apparent in the representation of Tibetans by Kalidas Nag as in a ‘state of savage isolation … naturally primitive and gross by temperament’. This also applied to what he termed the ‘Indian colonies’ of Cambodia and Vietnam and the ‘Malay races’ of the South East Asian archipelago.Footnote 97 This tension between a celebration of empire and a critique of (European) imperialism was not left hanging. Kalidas Nag was not the only writer to implicitly delineate a narrative protocolFootnote 98 of ‘good’ imperialism (‘cultural’; ‘spiritual’; humanistic; apolitical) and ‘bad’ imperialism (aggressive; territorial; exploitative; violent). The former described, for instance, the expansion of the Ashokan dynasty; the latter the ‘primitive aggression’ of the Zoroastrian period of Indian-Persian contact, as well as the modern epoch of European imperialism.Footnote 99 Here again, was an example of defensive redefinition and counter-preaching – reimagining India's ‘imperial’ past, in distinction to European forms, to stake a claim for emancipated internationalist future.
Through global intellectual history we can read the idea of greater India beyond only an expression of cultural chauvinism or nationalist exceptionalism, and more as part of a wider cosmopolitan thought zone generated by circulations of peoples and ideas. Building on the effects on international thinking produced by labour circulations, explored in the earlier section, ideas of greater India overlapped with these circulations, taking inspiration from them as an example of how space and cultural hierarchies could be reimagined and reworked. Greater India offered a heterotopiaFootnote 100 of India's possible futures, multiply realised and ‘generated by the pragmatic need to get things done in communities with highly different others.’Footnote 101 For Parmanand the racialised exploitation of Indian communities in overseas colonies produced an alternative hierarchy, where ‘greater India’ resided in the exclusive protection of Hindu communities – a hierarchy ultimately reflected back into Indian society itself. But such particularlism was also evident in the more avowedly universalist renderings of greater India by Rabindranath Tagore – a vision of cultural recovery through international contact. This vision was one that drove the more historical scholarly exploits of the greater India society.
The idea of greater India was thus clearly an instance of international thought broadly conceived; produced transnationally, speaking the language of the ‘international’, yet suffused too with co-present themes of hierarchy and universalism, in both a normative and analytical sense. While we might read these texts as instances of an anti-colonial geographical imagination, there is a need, as Sugata Bose writes, ‘to distinguish a loftier aspiration of universalism (not a universalist boast) from the haughtier expression of cultural imperialism, even though the line between the two occasionally became blurred’.Footnote 102 It is this ‘blurring’ that global intellectual historical analysis can account for, placing this genre of avowedly ‘Indian’ international thinking into wider circulations of people and ideas that comprised global patterns of international thought apparent at this time.
The cosmopolitan thought zones of Benoy Kumar Sarkar
A striking feature of Indian scholarship contributing to international thought in the first half of the twentieth century was the mobility of its leading acolytes. Figures such as the Bengali sociologist Benoy Kumar Sarkar travelled widely, including prolonged trips to America, Europe, and East Asia. His 1949 lecture tour in America encompassed 25 university and college appearances as well as numerous meetings with commercial bodies, financiers, chapters of the Federal Reserve, learned societies, and Indian diaspora associations. These trips also fostered connections with American intellectual elites including the pragmatist philosopher John Dewey at Columbia University; sociologists Talcott Parsons and Carle Zimmerman at Harvard; and political scientist Raymond Buell at Indiana University, to name just a few. Sarkar also attended a Harris Foundation conference on South Asia in Chicago alongside political scientists Quincy Wright and Hans J Morgnthau.Footnote 103 His earlier trips to America yielded multiple articles in leading American political science journals including the Journal of Race Development, Political Science Quarterly, and The American Political Science Review, the latter featuring an article on a ‘Hindu Theory of International Relations’. In recognition of his contributions to JRD he was invited onto the board of editors, alongside W. E. B. Du Bois.Footnote 104
A more focused study of a thinker such as Sarkar builds on the movements of peoples and ideas explored above, allowing greater focus on the shared intellectual spaces they occupied. Presented with these examples of scholarly mobility, it is tempting to derive an argument of emulation, derivativeness, or diffusion of ‘Western’ or European knowledge. Yet the complex intellectual co-constitutions that resulted from these interactions, show that a simple analytical bifurcation of West/non-West, or colonial/anti-colonial does not suffice. Indian international thought, although necessarily parasitic upon ‘Western’ traditions, found spaces for epistemic insurgency and defensive redefinition. Often these scholars drew lines of comparison precisely to highlight divergent conceptual or ontological positions, even if seeking to contribute to a more conventional modernist conception of political or social science. More specifically, as this section shows, through these shared spaces we see how hierarchical conceptions of the world in an analytical and normative sense, did not necessarily drop out in the critique of empire. One example of this was in the critique of knowledge.
As often acknowledged, the early social and political sciences, and the histories upon which these disciplines drew, were often beset by their own assumptions as to the intellectual and cultural vitality of geographic zones. The ‘Leitmotif’ of B. K. Sarkar's 1922 essay collection, The Futurism of Young Asia was described by him as ‘a war against colonialism in politics and against “orientalisme” in science’.Footnote 105 Over half a century before Edward Said, Sarkar targeted Max Mueller, Schopenhauer, and the entire edifice of what he termed ‘Eur-American’ colonial knowledge as having ‘systematically cast Asia as a synonym for immorality, sensuousness, ignorance, and superstition’.Footnote 106 Yet precisely because of the ‘shared dwelling’ of this cosmopolitan thought zone – notwithstanding the ‘incongruities of power’ by which it was besetFootnote 107 – the re-enacting of languages and patterns of hierarchy were also apparent.
Sarkar's 1919 American Political Science Review article provides a good example. Drawing upon the Vedic texts, as well as the fourth century bc writings of Kautilya's Arthashastra and Kamandaka's Nitisara, Sarkar identified ‘a hierarchy or graded rank of states’ linked to the contemporary ranking of ‘first class powers’, ‘great powers’, and ‘small nations’, and reflected in the Hindu texts through the annual income ranking of ancient Indian states and the theory of political yajnas, sacrifices, and rituals.Footnote 108 As he explained, these status identifiers expressed the sovereign scope of individual rulers: kings, emperors, and then ‘universal monarchs exercising sovereignty over a large number of princes as the lord of an imperial federation’.Footnote 109 This last category anticipated a future state of sovereign paramountcy or sarva-bhauma (the ruler of the whole earth), a concept that Sarkar compared to the universal authority claimed by Hildebrand for the Papacy, and even futurist visions of ‘permanent peace’ - ‘the pious wishes for a “parliament of man” or the now popular “league of nations”’.Footnote 110 Status hierarchies tied up in the language of civilisation were also apparent in the ‘chief centres of ancient civilisation’, namely India, Persia, China, Egypt, Babylon, and Greece, whose contributions to the ‘culture of humanity’ was influenced by their ‘intercourse with the civilised and barbarous peoples’ of other territories.Footnote 111
The point here was not necessarily that Sarkar advocated the reestablishment of these patterns of order, this was more of an analytical rather than normative use of hierarchy. But in contrast to Nag, it is notable that Sarkar did not insist on the inherently pacific nature of past Indian expansions, nor of the pacific ideology of Hindu political thought. His elaboration of the mandala doctrine is exemplary in this regard. Described as underpinning the ‘Hindu idea of the “balance of power”’, drawing upon Kautilya, the mandala system was based around the cult of the vijigeesoo or ‘aspirant to conquest’, anticipating an innate drive by ambitious rulers to dominate a given international grouping. Making comparisons with Hobbesian anarchy Sarkar described this doctrine as presenting a political science as ‘essentially a science of enmity, hatred, espionage and intrigue, and an art of a thousand and one methods of preparedness for the “the next war”’.Footnote 112 It was against this doctrine that the state of sovereign paramountcy or sarva-bhauma was offered as a theoretical alternative, a more normative hierarchical vision of legitimate authority.
Both Sarkar and Nag's reclamation of ‘international India’ show how imperialism, internationalism, and hierarchy featured in mixed registers in the texts and interpretations of Indian international thought. They also demonstrate some of the challenges of making arguments of equivalency with more European idioms of international theory. The claim to internationalism through the imperial histories of Indian cultural-linguistic expansion and the renaissance of the Hindu Vedic texts was partly an attempt to recover the intellectual vitality of Indian political theory from the oblivion of orientalist portrayals of India as the realm of superstition and spirituality. In order to do so, both Nag and Sarkar made arguments that drew upon existing ways of ordering the world – they staked claims to internationalism as a normative good, but also courted imperial hierarchies as part of their analytical and normative claims. In this sense, the cosmopolitan thought zones they occupied drew upon common understandings of an internationalist ‘good’, and the co-presence of imperial orders – a nod towards the possibility of a global intellectual history of international thought that spans imperial and non-imperial spaces.
However, both of these writers also offered fundamental ontological and epistemological stances that make cross comparison with wider intellectual histories harder to achieve. Firstly, both were seeking to unseat European intellectual dominance. Therefore, despite the shared ‘good’ of broadening the horizons of historical understanding, both carried an inherent scepticism towards European categories of knowledge, including history. Sarkar perhaps demonstrates this most clearly in The Science of History and the Hope of Mankind. In his critique of European knowledge, he decried the ‘breaking up of the province of knowledge into several departments and the relegation of each to a separate treatment’, arguing ‘the sciences have become specialised and their scope greatly narrowed.’ In the field of history he suggested a ‘principle of isolation and specialisation’ had forced a narrowing on ‘the statal life of a people … the political affairs of a community, e.g., administration of the state, international diplomacy, wars and treaties, expansion and secession of territories’.Footnote 113 While this had given rise to ‘an altogether new branch of learning, viz. Political Science’, such ‘specialised activities’ had ‘withdrawn the attention of scholars from the study of the hopes and aspirations of man, the progress and decay of civilisations, and the ultimate aims and losses of humanity’.Footnote 114 In effect, history (and by extension Political Science) had lost its humanity.
In its place, Sarkar advocated for a more holistic, neo-Hegelian, vernacular conception of ‘world forces’ (visva-shakti). ‘Human life’, he argued, ‘is … influenced and controlled by the forces and substances in the universe. The growth, development, and liberty of Man depend on the resultant of all the mutual relations between the various agencies of the social and physical environments. It is the interaction of all friendly and inimical world-forces that gives to each human being its peculiar external characteristics and endows it with its proper mental and moral outfit.’Footnote 115 Rooted in his reading of Indian political philosophy, visva-shakti offered an almost historical sociological reading of the forces of world history and world politics viewed as contingent upon a particular time and space. Accordingly, there was nothing inevitable about the superordinate status of European powers in the period of history within which he was writing, but rather they benefited from a particular concatenationFootnote 116 of world forces, which not only enabled their position of material superiority but justified this position based upon an entire edifice of scholarly knowledge.
Sarkar's work was therefore partly about highlighting the interplay between the reality of European imperialism and material power, co-determined by the power of ideas. This is significant since he was not so much critiquing the presence of hierarchy as explaining its particular manifestation in the here and now. As he wrote: ‘Subjection and independence, progress and degeneration, national achievement and decay … cannot be explained solely by the heroism or degeneracy of the nations themselves. These were not the results of isolated movements, but were the joint-products of the whole process of human affairs.’Footnote 117 Thus there was a limit to his epistemic critique. Certainly it was about re-establishing a status of equality in the intellectual vitality and political position of the ‘East’, but closer attention reveals that this was not about rendering all hierarchical forms as necessarily illegitimate but rather explaining their historical progeny in time and space.
This humanisation of history as Kalidas Nag would later term it,Footnote 118 indicated the deeper emancipatory project animating such works, innovating within a framework of knowledge while simultaneously attempting to transcend it.Footnote 119 It connected with a wider doctrine of shakti-yoga or ‘energism of man’, a signifier of a ‘transformative political agency’ as Manu Goswami describes it.Footnote 120 Shakti-yoga offered a return to a more humanist ontology within a wider dialogue on matters of history and internationalism; one that transcended nation-states and their borders with an appeal to shared human spirit. But one that also stressed the radical and transformative potential of the human (and perhaps masculine) spirit. ‘The causes of revolutions’, Sarkar wrote, ‘lie mostly in the power of transforming the surrounding conditions, e.g., that by which man can alter the relation of the world-forces with one another and bring about new international arrangements.’Footnote 121
The concept of shakti-yoga in its emphasis upon the embodied transformative power of great leaders also aligned Sarkar (as occasionally with other South Asian thinkers, including Tagore and Gandhi) with ideas associated with European fascist movements led by Mussolini and Hitler.Footnote 122 Sarkar, in particular, provides a good example of a thinker located in the intermediate realms of proto-fascism (resurrected today in certain strains of Hindu nationalism) and anti-colonial thought, without necessarily being reducible to either. In Benjamin Zachariah's terms, he drew upon a ‘fascist repertoire’.Footnote 123 His own elaboration of ‘greater India’ captured the spirit of a ’Young India’ commandeering these ‘world forces’ (visva-shakti).Footnote 124 For him, greater India was ‘a unit of enlarged experience and thought-compelling discoveries’; ‘wherever on earth there lives an Indian, there is an India’.Footnote 125 At the vanguard of this he identified, by name, the energism of man (shakti-yoga) embodied in Sarojini Naidu, Bhai Parmanand, Har Dayal, M. K. Gandhi, and Rabindranath Tagore, among many others.Footnote 126 Accordingly, humanist internationalism offered a more expansive framework for envisaging intersocietal interactions, one that would transcend the rigidities of emergent (European) disciplinary forms, including Political Science, taking the study of the international away from the ‘mystical associations’ of nationalities, nation states, and the certainties of interstate geopolitical visions. On the other hand it also corresponded, indeed privileged the histories of societal and cultural expansion that Indian thinkers had extracted from the histories of ‘greater India’.Footnote 127 It intersected, through intellectual circulations occupied by such mediators as Sarkar, with a more authoritarian strand of Indian international thought, co-present with emancipatory possibilities.
Conclusion
In light of the arguments presented in this article, Sarojini Naidu's 1924 address to the East Africa Indian National Congress makes more sense. In presenting East Africa as the ‘legitimate colony’ of the Indian people, Naidu was operating as a mediator within the circulatory movement of Indian overseas communities. Navigating the contested terrain of what constituted legitimate ‘colonisation’ Naidu traversed a cosmopolitan thought zone that sought to advocate for the status of diasporic communities who had been subject to the hierarchies of imperial governance, through an appeal to a benevolent understanding of colonisation. This was in part a geographical imaginary that evoked an expanded conception of Indian political space, one rooted not in the notion of nations and borders, but in the commercial, cosmopolitan, ‘cultural’, and affective ties that diaspora communities had established worldwide. This was one variant of what others referred to as ‘greater India’. Despite its benevolent subtexts, as the section above has shown, this appeal to greater India was an argument that was inescapably entangled in notions of political space that were imperial in some form, showing how ideas of empire and hierarchy were not the preserve of European imperial states but were part of the furniture of international imaginaries, both imperial and ‘anti-imperial’, in the early twentieth century.
The writing of international thought in a ‘global’ mode ought not to be enslaved by the categories and concepts we have found it useful to work with in other areas of the International Relations discipline. This includes those of nation/nationalist, empire/imperialist, race/racist, and anti-colonial/anti-colonialist. Thinking beyond these categories does not mean to imply that they are invalid, but rather to point to another way of understanding how our ideas of the world exceed our categories about that world through multiple overlapping and connected affinities, tensions, compatibilities, and frictions. A global intellectual history of international thought provides a more detailed and sympathetic reading of the individual histories we use to construct these concepts, while moving us more faithfully towards a ‘global’ International Relations that avoids being repopulated by categories that pulled it apart in the first place. It also helps us to transcend the binary categories that keep individual thinkers in analytical separation from one another, allowing previously marginalised thinkers into a more expanded conversation on international thought broadly conceived, and providing a more thorough analysis of those aspects of international thought that evade simple categorisation.
What are the implications of these arguments for International Relations? Firstly, the global intellectual history approach holds broad applicability. Intellectual trends that have previously been read within a particular geocultural episteme may take on a more expansive resonance. For example, transnational networks and patterns of migration seeded realism as an ‘American’ theoretical approach, notably through the escape of Jewish intellectuals from Nazi Germany in the 1930s.Footnote 128 Yet the ‘power worship’ that George Orwell identified in wider literary cultures at this time transcended these circulations, registering with anti-imperial movements elsewhere keen to re-impose their own status in a clearly hierarchical world order.Footnote 129 We can speak of realism as part of a wider transboundary circulation of ideas encompassing ‘anti-colonial’ thinkers beyond Europe, connected through a variety of intellectual collaborations and co-dependencies.
Second, global intellectual history allows us to reconceive international thought as a relational assemblage: inherently provisional and corresponding to multiple intellectual and material circulations and entanglements. The themes of mobility and diaspora, seen through the corresponding example of labour movements drawn upon in this article highlight this. Other avenues for the exploration of material/non-material assemblages might include interfaces with technology including transport and communications,Footnote 130 the natural world,Footnote 131 or with popular and literary culture.Footnote 132 To reiterate: these entanglements are not necessarily geoculturally specific – they were felt on a global scale.
Finally, the arguments presented in this article explicitly do not refute the burgeoning and valuable work being done to recover histories of anti-colonial and extra European thought. Rather it offers an alternative ontological, and in some sense methodological approach that helps interpret those instances of ‘anti-colonial’ thought that are not cast simply in terms of counterhegemonies. In turn, we might address what Ida Roland Birkvad terms the ‘progressive bias’ in existing literature.Footnote 133 Crucial here is to recognise that at times anti-colonial thought contained within it the seeds of later chauvinist and nationalist strains of political thought. By ignoring these more uncomfortable lineages a space opens up for the unproblematic recovery of these thinkers by contemporary political elites in order to locate such thinkers within a sanitised vision of ‘post-Western’ international thought. The move to ‘globalise’ IR must contend with the politicisation of ‘non-Western’ thinkers, particularly by authoritarian regimes. If we wish to have a scholarly conversation on these intellectual histories, we must pay attention to all lineages including more problematic intersecting and entangled histories, to show how contemporary observers might seek to manipulate and narrate them in a partial manner, and to prevent a vivisection of intellectual history for an entirely different purpose.
Acknowledgements
The author is extremely grateful to two anonymous reviewers and the editors of The Review of International Studies for their constructive comments on this article. Sincere thanks also go to colleagues and friends who offered comments on earlier drafts, including Shruti Balaji, Jo Bluen, Avinash Paliwal, Polly O'Hanlon, and Ameya Pratap Singh. Drafts of this article were presented at panels and seminars at IPSA (2018), ISA (2019), St Antony's Asian Studies Centre, and the LSE South Asia Centre. Sincere thanks to the organisers and participants at each of these. All arguments, omissions, and errors remain the sole responsibility of the author. The research that contributed to this article was funded by a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship Award.