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Another Reason [Paperback]

Gyan Prakash (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 9, 1999 0691004536 978-0691004532

Another Reason is a bold and innovative study of the intimate relationship between science, colonialism, and the modern nation. Gyan Prakash, one of the most influential historians of India writing today, explores in fresh and unexpected ways the complexities, contradictions, and profound importance of this relationship in the history of the subcontinent. He reveals how science served simultaneously as an instrument of empire and as a symbol of liberty, progress, and universal reason--and how, in playing these dramatically different roles, it was crucial to the emergence of the modern nation.

Prakash ranges over two hundred years of Indian history, from the early days of British rule to the dawn of the postcolonial era. He begins by taking us into colonial museums and exhibitions, where Indian arts, crafts, plants, animals, and even people were categorized, labeled, and displayed in the name of science. He shows how science gave the British the means to build railways, canals, and bridges, to transform agriculture and the treatment of disease, to reconstruct India's economy, and to transfigure India's intellectual life--all to create a stable, rationalized, and profitable colony under British domination.

But Prakash points out that science also represented freedom of thought and that for the British to use it to practice despotism was a deeply contradictory enterprise. Seizing on this contradiction, many of the colonized elite began to seek parallels and precedents for scientific thought in India's own intellectual history, creating a hybrid form of knowledge that combined western ideas with local cultural and religious understanding. Their work disrupted accepted notions of colonizer versus colonized, civilized versus savage, modern versus traditional, and created a form of modernity that was at once western and indigenous.

Throughout, Prakash draws on major and minor figures on both sides of the colonial divide, including Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, the nationalist historian and novelist Romesh Chunder Dutt, Prafulla Chandra Ray (author of A History of Hindu Chemistry), Rudyard Kipling, Lord Dalhousie, and John Stuart Mill. With its deft combination of rich historical detail and vigorous new arguments and interpretations, Another Reason will recast how we understand the contradictory and colonial genealogy of the modern nation.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Prakash offers a fascinating analysis. . . . The meticulous research and the compelling narrative make this a highly recommended book. -- Choice

Another Reason is an intelligent, sophisticated and lucid work of scholarship, which fills a major gap in the historiography of India. -- Zaheer Baber, Times Literary Supplement

From the Back Cover

"In this tour de force of historical scholarship and archival invention, Gyan Prakash focuses on the political culture of scientific thought as the crucible of emergent Indian nationalism. He produces a brilliant genealogy of 'colonial modernity,' agile and attentive to contemporary postcolonial questions: the contradictory desires for both science and tradition, 'newness' and orthodoxy, the secular and the sacred. Immersed in such complexities, Prakash retrieves the aspirational, progressive voices of the freedom movement to address contemporary Indian life. This is a superb work of historical revision by a writer of great insight and imagination."--Homi Bhabha, University of Chicago

"This is a pathbreaking work. It adds a new dimension to the study of colonialism by holding up the mirror of science to the Raj and reciprocally that of governmentality to science in a colonial condition. Caught up in this double reflection, the problem of modernity appears in a fresh but disturbing light. A truly brilliant achievement."--Ranajit Guha

"Gyan Prakash mounts a powerful and sustained argument in this book for treating the dissemination of science in colonial India not, as conventional historiography would have it, as the gradual supersession of backwardness and superstition and the spread of universal enlightenment, but as a case of hybrid growth. As is to be expected from Prakash, the research is meticulous and solid and his presentation is clear and forceful."--Partha Chatterjee, author of The Nation and Its Fragments


Product Details

  • Paperback: 248 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (August 9, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691004536
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691004532
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #963,228 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Foucauldian discussion of science and state in India, July 5, 2001
By 
Dave Carroll (San Diego, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Another Reason (Paperback)
This book is a better example of the use of Foucauldian analysis in a non-Euro/American setting. Prakash's discussion of how the colonial state used science to legitimate its rule, and how the nationalist anticolonial elites redefined and reinscribed science to legitimate their own goals is very thorough. He applies Foucault's notion of "governmentality" to demonstrate how science operated to control and maintain the populace. Highly recommended.
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not Science but more..., November 8, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Another Reason (Paperback)
This not about science as such, but about the idea of science. This is one of best recent academic books that I have read on modern India. Using science as a window into the culture of modern India, or Indian modernity, Prakash provides a captivating account of how areas ranging from museums to religion to politics were refashioned. The book is also very elegant, starting with the cool cover, the well chosen chapter epigraphs, and chapter titles. You will come away with a very thoughtful, nuanced understanding of how the idea of science entered the constitution of colonial India. One last thing, though Prakash's approach is what would be called "postcolonial," it is solidly grounded in Indian materials while being very stylish. A real treat!
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Indian Modernity Is Inseparable From Science's Authority, June 9, 2007
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This review is from: Another Reason (Hardcover)
Every nation born out of decolonization shares a certain faith in the emancipatory powers of science. Perhaps this blind reverence to the lights of reason was a sign of the times when they gained their independence, hoping to find a third way between capitalism's drive for modernization and socialism's social engineering. Or perhaps the positivist creed was implanted in their collective mind much before, under the authority of their colonial master, or again perhaps it developed independently as a mean to seize their own destiny and claim for themselves the age of reason that was denied to them.

To capture reason's mirror image into the world of collective beliefs and representations, and to analyze the dreams that science inspired, one needs to develop tools that are more sensitive than the conceptual apparatus commonly used by the historian. Michel Foucault's genealogical approach offer such frame of analysis, and this is why the French philosopher has found a wide following among anthropologists and other social scientists.

However, Foucault paid little attention to colonialism in outlining his key concepts, and he neglected the role that empires played in the formation of modern disciplines such as political economy or demographics. Given Foucault's view that governmentality and biopower, two key notions that marked the entry into modernity, were constituted fully within the borders of the West, their career in the colonies, in societies marked by their failure to achieve the "threshold of modernity", can only be seen as a dim reflection of their metropolitan original.

In Another Reason, Gyan Prakash shows that the scientific imagination that developed among the colonized elites of India wasn't a simple replica of the status and representations attached to science in Victorian England. In order to wield its transforming power, "science had to be tropicalized, brought down to the level of the natives and even forced upon them." Science went native in colonial museums that displayed the wonders of science and therefore appealed to imagination and to superstition as much as to reason, or in the creation of new technologies of government, such as tropical medicine or national accounting, that later found their way into Western societies.

But colonial rule also allowed for indigenous agency, indeed required it. Indigenous elites soon realized the basic contradiction between the emancipatory power of science and its use as an instrument of domination and oppression. They contested the Western claim to universal reason by pointing out that India had also developed its own tradition of scientific knowledge and rational enquiry. As practicing scientists and Hindu religious reformers read ancient texts and interpreted traditions to identify an original "Hindu science" upon which an Indian universality could stand, the nation soon became the political horizon to which Indians aspired and that they claimed as a right of their own. A lasting consequence was the identification of Hinduism as the cultural texture of the nation and the definition of an Indian modernity in a predominantly Hindu and Sanskritic idiom.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE EMERGENCE and existence of India is inseparable from the authority of science and its functioning as the name for freedom and enlightenment, power and progress. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
colonial governmentality, modern technics, sanitary commissioner, colonial science, sanitary state, colonial modernity, agricultural exhibition, contagion theory, indigenous medicine, nationalist imagination
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
British India, Arya Samaj, Asiatic Society, North India, Swami Dayananda, Hind Swaraj, Yashoda Devi, Bethune Society, British Library, Mahendra Lal Sircar, Medical College, Brahmo Samaj, East India Company, Royal Society, Srinivasa Murti, United States, Indian Museum, Vedic Hinduism, Abdul Luteef Khan, Edgar Thurston, Father Lafont, Government of India, Partha Chatterjee, South India, Soviet Union
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