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Civilizing Missions in Colonial and Postcolonial South Asia

Watt, Carey A. [u.a.] [Hrsg.]:
Civilizing Missions in Colonial and Postcolonial South Asia : from improvement to development / ed. by Carey A. Watt and Michael Mann. - London [u.a.] : Anthem Press, 2011. - vi, 337 S. : Ill. - (Anthem South Asian Studies)
ISBN 978-1-84331-864-4
£ 60,00 / US$ 99,00
DDC: 954.03

Beschreibung
Civilizing Missions in Colonial and Postcolonial South Asia demonstrates how the civilizing mission can serve as an analytical rubric with relevance to many themes in the colonial and postcolonial eras: economic development, state building, pacification, nationalism, cultural improvement, gender and generational relations, caste and untouchability, religion and missionaries, class relations, urbanization, NGOs, and civil society.
   While some chapters investigate civilizing initiatives that were driven by the British Raj or Indian postcolonial state, the book also considers many examples of nongovernmental undertakings. For example, examining the role of missionary educational endeavours shows how missionary bodies could operate in an ambivalent space between Indians and the colonial state. Moreover, analysis of Indian civilizing efforts carried out by nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), the nationalist movement or postcolonial Indian states gives us interesting opportunities to scrutinize how the civilizing mission could be internalized as a form of 'self-civilizing' by Indians. Some papers also show the global linkages of civilizing efforts in the British Empire, while others examine long-term continuities through broad comparative analyses covering the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This takes us into the postcolonial era (beyond 1947, into the late twentieth and twenty-first centuries), and such 'transgressions' across the colonial divide give this volume added appeal. [Verlagsinformation]

Inhalt
Carey A. Watt:
Introduction: The Relevance and Complexity of Civilizing Missions c. 1800-2010. 1
PART I: THE RAJ'S REFORMS AND IMPROVEMENTS: ASPECTS OF THE BRITISH CIVILIZING MISSION
1. Adam Knowles:
Conjecturing Rudeness: James Mill's Utilitarian Philosophy of History and the British Civilizing Mission. 37
2. Michael Mann:
Art, Artefacts and Architecture: Lord Curzon, the Delhi Arts Exhibition of 1902-03 and the Improvement of India's Aesthetics. 65
PART II: COLONIALISM, INDIANS AND NONGOVERNMENTAL ASSOCIATIONS: THE AMBIGUITY AND COMPLEXITY OF 'IMPROVEMENT'
3. Jana Tschurenev:
Incorporation and Differentiation: Popular Education and the Imperial Civilizing Mission in Early Nineteenth Century India. 93
4. Harald Fischer-Tiné:
Reclaiming Savages in 'Darkest England' and 'Darkest India': The Salvation Army as Transnational Agent of the Civilizing Mission. 125
5. Andrea Major:
Mediating Modernity: Colonial State, Indian Nationalism and the Renegotiation of the 'Civilizing Mission' in the Indian Child Marriage Debate of 1927-1932. 165
PART III: INDIAN 'SELF-CIVILIZING' EFFORTS C. 1900-1930
6. Shobna Nijhawan:
'Civilizing Sisters': Writings on How to Save Women, Men, Society and the Nation in Late Colonial India. 193
7. Prashant Kidambi:
From 'Social Reform' to 'Social Service': Indian Civic Activism and the Civilizing Mission in Colonial Bombay c. 1900-20. 217
PART IV: TRANSCENDING 1947: COLONIAL AND POSTCOLONIAL CONTINUITIES
8. Shahid Perwez:
Female Infanticide and the Civilizing Mission in Postcolonial India: A Case Study from Tamil Nadu c. 1980-2006. 243
9. Carey A. Watt:
Philanthropy and Civilizing Missions in India c. 1820-1960: States, NGOs and Development. 271
Michael Mann:
Afterword: Improvement, Progress and Development. 317
List of Contributors. 329
Index. 331

Herausgeber
CAREY A. WATT holds a PhD in South Asian history from the University of Cambridge, and is currently Associate Professor of History (South Asia/World) at St. Thomas University in Canada. Homepage.
MICHAEL MANN holds a PhD from the University of Heidelberg and is currently Professor of South Asian History and Culture at Humboldt University, Berlin. Profile page.

Quellen: Anthem Press; WorldCat; Amazon; Google Books