South Asian Studies Colloquium Series: Gondwana and the Politics of Primitivism, Pratik Chakrabarti

Event time: 
Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - 4:30pm to 6:00pm
Location: 
Henry R. Luce Hall (LUCE ), 203 See map
34 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Speaker/Performer: 
Pratik Chakrabarti, The University of Manchester

This paper argues that primitivism, identified simultaneously in human and natural landscapes, was a key theme of nineteenth-century colonialism. It analyses the multiple historical tropes of Gondwana, the densely forested, hills, ravines of Central India, where ethnological studies among tribes and the geological studies of the oldest rock formations of the Indian subcontinent shaped ideas of Indian ethnological aboriginality and geological primitivism simultaneously. Gondwana was also vital to British imperialism for its coal and cotton. Through a history of Gondwana, the landscape, its geological and anthropological evolution and its social history, this paper identifies the colonial conquest of time; appropriating India’s remote antiquity to the colonial present. The sciences of geology, archaeology, anthropology, and history aligned the aboriginal in Indian culture to the nineteenth-century quest to locate a proto-Indian-ness that found affinity with the British colonizing mission in both its metaphysical and material domains. Primitivism became a mode of colonisation in this simultaneous imagination and conquest of the landscape.

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