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Science and the Raj, 1857-1905

Science and the Raj, 1857-19051995

Deepak Kumar

About this book

This book explores the links between science, technology and the process of colonization in the context of Victorian India. It begins with a study of the concept of colonial science and then moves on to early exploratory activities in this area; problems in science administration; science education; scientific researches; and Indian responses to all these activities. Colonial scientists had a dual mandate - to serve the state and to serve science. But as the colonial arteries hardened, science became a form of official knowledge, with official hierarchies and rituals. The evolution and progress of colonial science in India reveal a pattern which can be discerned. Science had an ideology, a string of institutions, and a set of committed people to serve very specific colonial ends. The questions asked are: what were the colonial postures in science? To what extent were scientific knowledge and discourses used to achieve political and cultural goals? How did the recipient culture appropriate or redefine the metropolitan ideology of science?

Details

First published
1995
OL Work ID
OL3216767W

Subjects

HistoryScienceScience and stateIndia, historyTechnologyColonialism

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.