Western science in modern India
Material type:
- 9788178242927
- 306.45 CHA
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Gandhi Smriti Library | 306.45 CHA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 147933 |
Browsing Gandhi Smriti Library shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
306.4460954022 BRE Atlas of the languages and ethnic communities of South Asia | 306.446095491 RAH Language ideology and power | 306.4495491 RAH Language and politics in Pakistan | 306.45 CHA Western science in modern India | 306.46 MAY Big data: a revolution that will transform how we live, work and think | 306.46 SLA Culture and technology | 306.460954 KAR Visual histories: photography in the popular imagination |
This book is about Western science in a colonial world. It asks: how do we understand the transfer and absorption of scientific knowledge across diverse cultures, from one society to another?
Pratik Chakrabarti approaches this question from the assumption that knowledge is fundamentally linked with experience. He analyses what was ‘Western' about that scientific knowledge, and what constituted the ‘colonialness’ of Indian experience. He shows that the expansion of a European discipline into strange and distant lands meant experiencing new phenomena, examining new facts, developing new hypotheses. This journey of science from Europe to colonial India, he argues, was also one from metropolis to periphery. The book explores whether the periphery can alter the terms of the metropolis.
Starting in the eighteenth century, Chakrabarti reveals a process of knowledge-transfer that involved not only Indian nationalist scientists but also Europeans (East India Company surgeons and surveyors)—the initial practitioners of modern science in India. In doing so he highlights the fact that the marginality of colonial scientific experience, like the battles to overcome it, could be located at diverse cultural sites.
This book spans a period of about 170 years, from 1780 to 1950, and traverses several institutions. These include the Asiatic Society, the Geological Survey of India, the Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science, the Bose Institute. It also looks acutely at the work of individuals such as Henry Piddington, Thomas Holland, Frederick Corbyn, Hugh Falconer, Mahendralal Sircar, J.C. Bose, P.C. Ray, and M.N. Saha.
As a historical elucidation of the location of science in modern India, this is a major monograph. It will interest scientists, historians and sociologists, as well as students of imperialism and the history of ideas.
There are no comments on this title.