Event Recording: Conversations on South Asia with Jessica Namakkal

Transcript for Conversations on South Asia with Jessica Namakkal

https://youtu.be/_Cw1yYDOe-k

>> Lhost: All right! Hello everyone and welcome to the April event in the Conversations on South Asia series here at Dartmouth College. It’s wonderful to see so many friends, colleagues, and students in the audience today. Thanks for coming out.

I’m really looking forward to today’s conversation which features a great lineup of panelists, who will all be commenting on Jessica Namakkal’s book Unsettling Utopia: The Making and Unmaking of French India, which was published in the Columbia Studies in International and Global History Series with Columbia University Press last year in 2021.

For those of you who are new to the series, I’m Elizabeth Lhost, a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Society of Fellows and a lecturer in the Department of History at Dartmouth College, and I’m one of the organizers of this year’s series. It’s my great pleasure to be hosting and moderating today’s discussion with all of you.

Before we begin, I would like to acknowledge that Dartmouth College, which hosts this series, sits on the ancestral, unceded lands of the Abenaki people, who belong to the Wabanaki confederacy. I would also like to thank our series’ sponsors: the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund, the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program, and the Department of History at Dartmouth. Without their support the series would really not be possible.

I would also like to mention the support and assistance the series receives from Professor Douglas Haynes and our Bodas Family Undergraduate South Asian Studies Fellow Sri Sathvik Rayala. Thank you to both of them for their help.

Today we have four panelists joining us for the discussion. So, in order to give them the maximum amount of time possible, I’m trying to keep my introductions brief today.

So our first speaker will be the author Jessica Namakkal, who is an Associate Professor of the Practice of International Comparative Studies, Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies, and History at Duke University’s Trinity College of Arts and Sciences. In addition to Unsettling Utopia, which was published last year, Dr. Namakkal has published articles like “Decolonizing Marriage and the Family: The Lives and Letters of Ida, Benoy, and Indira Sarkar” in the Journal of Women’s History and “The Terror of Decolonization: Exploring Pondicherry’s Goonda Raj” in the journal Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies. Dr. Namakkal is currently working on two projects, one that focuses on decolonizing cults and another related to a history of sexuality, race-mixing, and colonialism in the twentieth century. 

So, after the author has had the chance to introduce the book to all of us, we’ll have comments and questions from our three panelists, beginning with Sana Aiyar.

Dr. Aiyar is an Associate Professor of History at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Her research focuses on the regional and transnational histories of South Asia and South Asian diasporas in the Indian Ocean basin. Her publications include Indians in Kenya: The Politics of Diaspora, which was published with Harvard University Press in 2015 and articles and book chapters, including “Revolutionaries, Maulvis, and Monks: Burma’s Khilafat Moment,”  which was published in the volume Oceanic Islam: Muslim Universalism and European Imperialism, as well as “Empire, Race, and the Indians in Colonial Kenya’s Contested Public Political Sphere, 1919–1923,” which was published in Africa: Journal of the International African Institute. Her current projects examine encounters of African soldiers and South Asian civilians in the Second World War and migration, religious and ethnic politics, nationalism, and anticolonial activism across India and Myanmar during the 1930s.

Our second discussant Ananya Jahanara Kabir is Professor of English Literature in the Department of English at King’s College in London. In 2018, she was the winner of India’s Infosys Prize for the Humanities, and in 2019, won the Humboldt Research Prize from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation in Germany. Dr. Kabir’s work focuses on creolization as a historical process and cultural theory. She is the author of Territory of Desire: Representing the Valley of Kashmir, which was published in 2009 and Partition’s Post-Amnesias: 1947, 1971 and Modern South Asia, published in 2013. In May 2020, Dr. Kabir and the Franco-Tamil Ari Gautier co-founded the cultural platform Le Thinnai Kreyolk, which, through which they promote their vision of a multilingual, plural and creolized India. For the next academic year, 2022-23, Dr. Kabir will hold a British Academy Senior Research Fellowship to focus on writing her monograph ‘Alegropolitics: Creolizing Connection on the Afromodern Dance Floor.’

Our final discussant will be Jayita Sarkar, who is currently Assistant Professor of International Relations at Boston University and will very soon be an Associate Professor of Economic & Social History at the University of Glasgow beginning in July 2022. Her book Ploughshares and Swords: India’s Nuclear Program in the Global Cold War, which is forthcoming with Cornell University Press later this year, examines India’s nuclear and space programs through the prisms of technopolitics and territoriality while focusing on their consequences for democratic accountability. Her new book-length project, Partition Machine, investigates the travel itineraries of the idea and practice of territorial divisions from the borderlands of South Asia to the world.

So after each of the panelists has made their remarks, we will then open the floor to questions from the audience and invite you to use the Q&A feature in Zoom to submit your questions. And with that, I’ll pass it off to you Jessica. 

>> Namakkal: Thank you so much, and thanks to Elizabeth for organizing this and all of the talks, many of which I’ve attended and have learned so much from. So, thank you for that and to all of our panelists, who have taken the time to engage and taken time out of their day to be here with us. Thank you so much to everyone. So I’m going to keep this brief to about ten minutes, as directed.

To just talk about the, the sort of the scope of the project and share a few maps, because, as I learned while researching and doing this, maps are sort of fundamental to understanding really what, what is French India. So let’s start there actually and let me share my screen with you.

Okay.

Okay, so what is French India? There’s no subtitles. Okay, so what is French India? French India was a lot of things throughout time, and that’s one of the points of the book is to really think about what French India was in relation to the scope of the making of what we know is India today. And so, just to briefly give you a sense of time and space, the French arrived in India in the 17th century around the same time everybody else was arriving as a, as a trade company, the French East India Company. And, you know, they went to, to trade and to set up ports. There are lots of interesting books about this, and the majority of work that sort of happens on the French territories in India are focused on this earlier period, although there aren’t a lot of them.

And, and, and so there’s, there’s a moment for the French in the, in the 17th-18th centuries, where you, they are considering expanding their presence in South Asia, right. And, and, for, you know, in French historiography, French India is something of a, of a nostalgic failure, it, an imperial failure in that they, they sort of have this memory of we could have, we could have been the British in India, right. So, it stands out, and so it was, this is really important to the 20th century, which I’m working on here, because one of the reasons these five small territories of French India are really important to the French is that they hold cultural meaning to them, right, that they have a presence in this huge cultural, political, economic space that has been dominated by their, by their foes the British, right. So that really sets the stage for what I do in this book, which thinks about what made French India and how does that help us sort of reflect on what happened in the rest of India during this period of what I call decolonization but I’ll get into that in a second.

So the territories and you see a map here. This map was made by a photographer named Tim Stallman, just to give him credit. And, and what you see here is these five areas, now the thing to know about, your, you see four of them and then a line up to the fifth, which is Chandannagar, which is a suburb of Calcutta today and, and was at the time too. So if you know the geography of South Asia, which many of you probably do here, you’ll notice they’re very spread out from each other.

Pondicherry is the headquarters. It was the head, it was the headquarters for the entirety of the French presence in India. It’s about 100 kilometers south of Chennai or Madras, and that’s important because in early, you know, in the 17th-18th centuries, the British and the French are sort of battling between these, these two areas.

Again, you know not to get into the weeds here because I have ten minutes, but this is really important, when we think about the historiography of India and think about how much of this is focused in the north, right, or areas north of South India, all over the place, and to think that there’s so much happening in South India that hasn’t been part of the story of the making of modern India, right. So that’s one of the, one of the goals of the project here. So, there’s five territories. Pondicherry. Karaikal is just south of Pondicherry. Yanam is up in Andhra Pradesh. Mahe is in Kerala. So you know people are speaking different languages, right, and, of course, we have Chandannagar by Calcutta, which becomes a really important point in, in the beginning of anticolonial organizing in the early 20th century, because, of course, Calcutta is really the center of a lot of the anticolonialism that’s happening.

So that’s the first map. The second map I want to show you is of Pondicherry itself. So the one on my left, the territory of Pondicherry, which you see there is actually how Pondicherry was divided up between British and French territory. So all of the black, that’s not water. The gray is water. The black is British territory, and the white areas are the French parts of Pondicherry. And this is just Pondicherry that you can sort of see on the cover of the book behind Elizabeth there, that there’s a rock border through a lot of these areas where there isn’t a water border separating the British and the French areas. So, you know, we have these situations where there are rocks down the middle of villages separating British and French India. After 1947 when the, when the British leave, French India remains India, remains, remains French, and British India becomes India, and those borders don’t change, right. So, that’s something really important to know too. 

The last thing, the last map, I want to show you there is of the central area of Pondicherry. So that’s right on the ocean there, and it’s just, can you even see my pointer right here, it’s this area within here. And I want to show you this to show you that the area below this canal on this yellow, this blue line is racially segregated. And in practice that didn’t always work, but it translates into a privileged area that was called the “white town” and above it is “black town,” Ville Noire and Ville Blanche. And they remain economically segregated today. There was never a much, enough of a European presence to have a pure sort of racial segregation happening, but there were all kinds of spatial segregating practices that were happening, and those have continued today.

So these borders are not widely discussed. It’s interesting they’re actually still there today, so in this Pondicherry one, Pondicherry today, and if I go back here for a moment, Pondicherry today is ruled as a, is governed as an union territory, except for Chandannagar, which voted to join the Indian Union in 1949. The other four territories remain an administrative unit, so they’ve, they’ve retained their separate identities from their surrounding states, and that was part of the negotiation that happened. 

And if you look at Pondicherry here, those borders still exist. They’re not, they’re not securitized in the same way that they were during this period. But if you are going to Pondicherry, if you’ve been there, you will know there’s a lot of traffic stanchions that will say you’re now leaving the Union Territory of Pondicherry and entering Tamil Nadu. So, you can still sort of see their presence and I, you know, I’m not an ethnographer, so I didn’t do this but I’ve heard it conversationally from people that, you know, there is still some sense of policing around them, especially because of the import of alcohol and the taxes differing, but you know any, any borders and excuse for the police to be, be monitoring people right.

So the last picture I want to show you and then I’ll just speak for a moment about the larger themes of the book is that, you know, these, these borders are not widely discussed. There’s really no scholarship on them, and this is a picture at one of those borders in 1952. And what you see is a line of French policemen on the French India-India border, so this is after independence, so India, French India. And they’re holding back a huge crowd of people who are protesting the continued rule of the French in India. So in 1947, after the British left, in French India, there’s a law that’s passed immediately that says you can’t have protests in French India, right. They don’t want anyone sort of calling for independence. They, and in fact, both governments, both the Indian Government, the French Government sort of felt this way because they wanted to do this as a diplomatic process, right. They didn’t really want the activity on the ground, yet, you know, you can’t, you can’t put down the people like that. And, and so you’ve got these huge crowds, and the police become the border here. And it’s a, it’s a visual example of how borders are, can, can be porous, how they also can become less so right just even with with the use of bodies to put them there.

So there’s all of these things happening, happening around the borders. This is not an isolated incident, as I show in the book. There’s a lot of activity. And somehow this isn’t part of the story of twentieth-century India, right. So one of my questions was why, why don’t we talk about this, right. Why isn’t this important to understanding, I’ll stop that there, the, the making of twentieth-century India, especially when you know, the question of who is, who is a citizen, who is an Indian is really at the basis of a lot of what happens in twentieth-century India? 

So, so just to give a few points, I mean that’s a little bit, there’s a lot of other things going on the book which we’ll hear about, but to give, to give a broader sense very quickly, I went into this project thinking about the question of what is decolonization and especially in India, a place that wasn’t fighting for decolonization but was fighting for independence, right. They were fighting for sovereignty. The arguments were about anticolonialism, and it wasn’t so much a project partly just fit, you know, in terms of the theory of decolonization being sort of a different thing in the 1940s, then it became after Frantz Fanon wrote The Wretched of the Earth in 1961 or after it was published. 

So my sort of thinking about this, what does it mean for the people of French India to be thinking about liberation, to thinking about sovereignty. What is sovereignty to them? And my goal in the book was really to center French Indians, right, and to ask the question what is a French Indian. Is it the same thing as an Indian? Is it the same thing as a French person legally, culturally, socially, all the sort of ways that we can do this? And think about what is what, what, what did it mean to them to live in this independent India and to think about what their futures may be.

A key point to this is understanding that in French India, the French allowed people, and you know this didn’t always work but, to become citizens of France. Nobody in the British Empire was a citizen, right. People were subjects of the Crown, so you really have people living a different existence, to some extent, in the French areas than in the British areas. So, so that was one of my big questions here.

I also wanted to push back against a tendency in political and some cultural histories to naturalize state sponsored decolonization. So, I argue in the book that decolonization should also be understood, not just as a moment, but as a movement, and one that does not have a linear or upwards trajectory, right. So to think what are the different forms of decolonization, right, and, and then the overarching argument is that sometimes writing histories of something has tended to, to freeze them in time. and I wanted to think methodologically about a way that we can understand these movements as dynamic and even if we write about them as a historical moment, how do we understand them as continuing on. 

So the way I do this in the book, and this will be my last point, is to look at the continuation of a colonial presence in French India. Of course, independence in French India is very different from British India because there’s no partition. There was no, you know years of traumatic violence and migration and the way that comes with partition and state making, right. But something else is happening. And so my suggestion here, right, is that, where we have this space where we don’t have these huge state processes, the colonial institutions are venerated and live on in a way that isn’t really acknowledged.

So, I turned to really cultural and spiritualism to understand how those two are political processes and how those continue on in today’s French India. So I do this by looking at two institutions. One is the Aurobindo Ashram, which is in Pondicherry and the intentional community of Auroville, which is just outside, although their territory overlaps a little bit.

Auroville has been in the news recently, so perhaps people know about them a little more than before, and I’m happy in Q&A to, to talk about it more. But they were a project. The ashram was established in 1926. The center of that ashram is Sri Aurobindo Ghosh, who was a Bengali freedom fighter, who took refuge in French India to flee British, British persecution. His right hand woman was a woman named Mirra Alfassa, who became known as The Mother, who is a woman from France. And they ran this ashram till his death in 1950. It’s still, it’s still very popular. It’s successful. It continues today.

And in 1968, The Mother started this project called Auroville that was meant to, to take up the project of the ashram and build this universal city. So today there’s about 3,000, between three and 4,000 people that live there, and people from all over the world live there.

And ultimately, what I do is I look at just like my, my consideration of what is a French Indian, what is there, what are their projects, what are their dreams, what are they fighting for. I also thought about this, this territory that had been under French rule, that had been nearby and how, what it means for the people of this area to then have this intentional community built on land that was bought from them very cheaply and which they now provide the labor for, right. So I use this term I call settler utopianism to, to, to really think through and look at the stories and the reasoning that the people who came from Europe and from Australia and from North America brought to the building of Auroville to sort of, to justify them building it there, and to continuing a project of colonial land extraction and labor, and labor, and labor extraction, right,  that they’re, they’re sort of employing the same things. 

And because it’s in postcolonial India, I use the language and the theories of settler colonialism. I’m not calling it a settler colony, but I’m suggesting that the people there are employing these tactics that are important to settler colonialism, to think about. And that’s how I look at what sort of, what happens after the French have left India.

Okay, I will stop there. Thank you everyone, and I’m really looking forward to your comments.

>> Aiyar: Thanks very much, Jessica, for that. I was actually a little nervous I might be going over some material that you’ve already spoken about, but I think that you’ve really set us up well to dive into what I, you know, we thought were the most interesting aspects of this. 

And I thought that I would, you know, organized my comments as sort of talking a little bit about the methodological approach that you use, then speaking a little bit about your historiographical intervention and then sort of ending with what I think are your main analytical contributions and then I have three questions that are related to each of those.

Um, so in the introduction of this book, Jessica talks about her approach as being an approach of minor history, to try and sort of disrupt what she calls major history and to look at minor histories as site of resistance. And, as is sort of obvious from the comments that she opened with, you know, the major history for British is British India, the project of colonialism, led by the British. And, in some ways sort of the French colonial project in India is the, is the sort of benign aspect, right, in the major sort of strands of historiography and also nationalist thinking. Now, in sort of centering French colonialism and putting sort of Pondicherry as the site of this resistance of, you know, sort of the, sort of minor history, I think that there are few things that really come through in those early chapters that felt quite distinctively French and different in some ways to the British.

One is this idea of French citizenship that you alluded to in your opening comments where from as early as 1881, you know, the colonial French subject could opt voluntarily, but all in quotes, for full French citizenship. And, in some ways, once you became a French citizen living in Pondicherry, it was more democratic because then you could have universal suffrage. In fact, that was introduced also from quite early on.

So as much as the sort is, this is something that the French take pride on across their empire,  but it is, in fact, a far more insidious form of colonialism, because, in order to qualify for French citizenship, you had to, in fact, give up all that was, quote on quote, native, and this went to language, you know, religion, etc., conversion to Catholicism. And you know, as I was reading this, I was thinking of Gregory Mann’ work in French West Africa and also Frederick Cooper’s work on the French Union scene, you know, in the post-war context, you know how does sort of the French, how do the French sort of think about decolonization.

The French Union becomes this way of it, and this is really, you know, in a way, we see reminiscences of this in the French idea of assimilation to the diversity plural issue versus the British approach of multiculturalism, both of which put their colonial subjects and postcolonial citizens in a waiting room, so they are sort of distinct in some ways. But ultimately sort of plays out in this very interesting way in Pondicherry, in Auroville as the site of disruption, and I thought that that was really wonderful how you brought that to the forefront.

But more than that, and I think more interestingly, another way in which they show up as a site of resistance is, you know, in sort of drawing attention on the revolutionaries, both in Chandannagar and in Pondicherry were French India does become a site of refuge, and so it’s a different kind of resistance for sort of revolutionaries for whom violence, you know, in violent protest becomes idea, either in terms of ideas or actual application, the form in which their anticolonial nationalism plays out.

And, here again, your work, you know it reminded me of Tim Harper’s, you know, massive volume on Underground Asia where he’s really sort of mapping the itineraries of these refugees in exile, and it is a sort of insurgent Asia, and I think that this fits into that as well. My own work on a Buddhist monk from Burma, U Ottama, who spends a lot of time in, well initially in France and then Chandannagar, you know, there are many different sites in the Maharaja of Baroda where Aurobindo Ghosh first goes. [inaudible] is also part of that. And I think it’s really important to disrupt the nationalist sort of, you know, nonviolent nationalism historiography with some of this. 

And so as I said, you know revolution here becomes, you know, it’s violent, in contrast to the Gandhi and non-violence satyagraha. But it’s also anticolonial and distinctly religious in some ways, and I want to take up these two in the next two comments that I have.

So in South Asia historiographical intervention, you know, this is really focused on what you sort of said that you know, towards the end, you know, of this moment of independence, which is really sort of just the starting point, really, and we have to think about decolonization as, in fact, the unfinished business of independence. And here I think you really sort of are focusing on the politics of anticolonial nationalism, where the story of Pondicherry, you know as it comes, you know begins really in the book with the arrival of Aurobindo Ghosh, who, you know, seeks refuge in the French territory.

But he sort of imagines Pondicherry as a part of his revolutionary imaginary of India. And you have a very interesting discussion of the homeland and what it means for Aurobindo Ghosh, a Bengali revolutionary to settle in Pondicherry in French India and talk about his homeland. But here really I was thinking about other revolutionaries, Subramania Bharati, who, again, you sort of talk about, who during his stay in Pondicherry actually commissions a sort of sculpture, statue of India where Bharat Mata is shown to, in fact, include Burma, and you know the pallu of Bharat Mata’s sari includes Burma. And again it’s a very Hindu idea of India. 

But as you were, as you sort of are distinguishing between the French India, British India and talking about anticolonialism and the politics of anticolonial nationalism, the French are also imagining their territory as Indian, right. So, it’s not sort of the French territory of Pondicherry as a this, as distinct from India. It’s still French India. So, this idea of an Indian homeland is one that I think different historical players sort of, you know, it’s an imagined homeland, which, where there’s no agreement on in terms of the politics and who constitutes it or even the borders, but the idea of India sort of exists in a both political and apolitical way.

Now you also very sort of wonderfully show how the renunciation of this revolutionary politics takes place in the ashram with Aurobindo Ghosh and the arrival of The Mother. And you use, Jessica uses the term anticolonial colonialism to describe the both Aurobindo Ghosh’s, you know, Pondicherry stay and you know his sort of turn to complete spiritual, a sort of non-political spiritualism and sort of The Mother’s sort of visibility that, you know, rises, right, through the 30s and 40s in Pondicherry.

And Jessica makes the argument that, you know, this is anticolonial colonialism, because it’s anticolonial as far as the British are concerned. But you know The Mother and sort of the institution of the ashram, you know, Auroville eventually, have very close ties with the French colonial state. And, here again, what you do is that you then sort of turn to other, so, to, the politics of anticolonialism, then it’s not located in the ashram but, in fact, with some other players in Pondicherry. Two in particular that the book talks about other [inaudible] Subha, the communist workers, and then one convert, Catholic convert to French citizen, who have their own versions of politics, which again are placed, so this is again where that site of Pondicherry is disrupting sort of dominant narratives of nationalism.

And then, in the moment of arrival, two things happen. The French offer a referendum in terms of what happens to their colonies, you know to French India. And although Chandannagar votes overwhelmingly for integration with India, there is no referendum that is held in Pondicherry at all. And then the other, the second sort of way in which that moment of arrival plays out is that The Mother starts asking for dual citizenship here in terms of how individuals will relate to the State. 

And here, you know, there were reference, the sort of resonances of, you know, different scholarship, which I’m sure that Jayita will get into, on citizenship and the long making and unmaking of citizens that plays out in very interesting ways. But also sort of reached very rich regional histories of Kashmir, the princely states, Goa, I’m sure that Ananya will be talking about, and I think this sort of book really is an interesting intervention in this.

Now in terms of analyzing this unfinished business of independence, you know, Auroville emerges, and, you know, the last chapter, which really is the, you know, high point, I think, of this book as settler utopianism. And Pondicherry is, you know, there’s a long line of Pondicherry being imagined as a site of utopia for the revolutionaries as refuge, which is very distinct from the Auroville sort of project of spiritual settlement. But I was thinking, I know Jessica makes the argument that we have to understand this in terms of neocolonialism, right. So it’s not settler colonialism of the sort that we see in the historiography, but they are these sort of reminiscences, you know, they are sort of, it only exists because it was French India.

But I was thinking of the idea of utopia as a cosmopolitan, spiritual community that was settled on a land that of which the settlers were not indigenous. It made me actually think about Gandhi’s phoenix farms in South Africa, which again was about something new. It’s a very cosmopolitan space. And Gandhi’s phoenix farms and then Sabarmati Ashram is a space of, you know, decolonization or independence or anticolonialism, not as a political project. Gandhi’s political project occurs in different sites. But it is a project of the non-political swaraj, and I wondered if, you know, perhaps Aurobindo Ghosh’s turn away from politics could be understood in terms of that kind of Gandhian swaraj rather than only the proximity to The Mother’s, you know, sort of project of settler, of the sort of utopianism.

I’m going to end quickly with three questions. I know that we have lots, lots more to say. One is the question on minor history and the site of resistance. Who is resisting what? So, is it the historian resisting the historiography? Or, you know, are we actually able to get to, and this is sort of the second question, more of a regional history where, you know, Pondicherry is placed within the more regional history of Tamil Nadu today or Tamil history? And, you know, Bhavani Raman’s work is the one that I think of in terms of this Tamil history. But you know I really wondered why Chandannagar is the point of departure and gets integrated into Bengal. You know, there’s sort of larger regional histories of Bengal and, you know, what is it about Pondicherry that doesn’t, or does it, right? The sources, the narrative, the perspective is sort of the colonial archive to an extent, and you’re critical of that. So you know what, what of the Tamil sort of voice beyond the two communist and sort of you know [inaudible] that we hear off?

In fact, finally, sort of in terms of spiritual settlement, you raise the point that the French exceptionalism, right, the idea of French exceptionalism in terms of equality and fraternity comes through in Auroville. But what of French secularism? You know, it was very, I kept thinking about how do these ideals of the French Revolution that come through of, you know, equality, fraternity, yes, that’s how we get Auroville as a cosmopolitan sort of space where everyone can be equal. But it is inherently spiritual and how does this square away with French ideas of secularism, which are very different from the British, you know, ideal of non-interference with religious matters which, in fact, creates a kind of Indian secularism, where the state is absolutely, intimately sort of linked with projects of spiritual, religious settlement, etc.? 

And, you know, in a way, I was thinking of Auroville in terms of other huge settlements like the Radha Soami Satsang or Osho’s Ashram where it is built on the land where others, where you don’t belong, built on the labor of local labor. And that really is, in a way, and, and it claims to be non-political but very close to local sort of political heads. So, you know, does this so, although I started with saying there’s this distinction between the French and British colonial project, given the spiritualism and secularism connection, in fact, do we see in Pondicherry that the French India on this issue of religion and spirituality was in fact closer to the British colonial project than perhaps we started off with? 

And I will end there. It’s been, it was a really wonderful book, and thank you very much for writing it, and I’m looking forward to our discussion! 

>> Jahanara Kabir: So I think it’s my turn to take up the baton and indeed it’s, this is a landmark book in, in my opinion. I’m going to, I’m going to actually read out from the final lines, which I think are very strong, and justifiably so, in the claims that you’re making, Jessica, for this work. And I quote the pages of this book are meant as a disruption of ideas, spaces and temporalities. Of the commonly told narratives of colonial and postcolonial history, shedding light on uncommon relationships that also disrupt postcolonial national disreliance on the boundedness of race and nation. I offer this disruption in an effort to further the larger project of decolonizing history. 

And you already spoke to the kind of centrality of decolonization and what it means as a theme and a kind of effort of your work and, and Sana spoke, picked up the idea of the minor, you know, the minor history in that which is, which is forming the disruptive kind of, you know, sort of disrupt vector I would say.

But I am, I wanted to take, take up a few more issues which I think for me arise from this, this claim that you make, which is, as I said, justifiably made. The book really sort of like, what can I say, enters into a sort of reified space of what we think are the cutting edge and and even accepted approaches to South Asia, and it certainly filled a huge vacuum, for me, when I was trying to build a new kind of like a space for myself, clearer space myself my own research. I’m not a historian. I’m a literary critic and cultural critic and historian. And I like to go off in wild directions throughout my career, you know, and in that, if you want to do that, you need people who are doing a really important, a close work in other disciplines, notably history. You need people to open the archive for the literary critic to step in because we don’t, we, our archives, we, of course, use the notion of archives, but it’s somewhat different, and we need that other archival opening, clearing of the space, and setting up certain counter arguments to receive norms in order for us to feel confident in what we are stepping forward to do. 

And so I also liked very much the spirit in which you open the book where you said, the number of people doing work on French India is small but powerful. And you know this, the sense of a small band of people who have worked together to give us a few but important books, for example, I’ve got some of them here. You mentioned some of them. We’ve got Jyoti’s, you know, Jyoti Mohan’s book Claiming India. We have Diana Agmon’s book of A Colonial Affair. We even have tomes, very difficult for non-historians to go through, but diligently, we must, such as Aniruddha Ray’s work. And all these books, you know, are very important so that someone like me can understand the context, you know. I’m working, for example, as you know, on on our common friend and colleague Ari Gautier’s book, books. He’s a, he’s a historical novelist of French India. Where do I go to understand what he’s writing about, you know? And it’s through him that I encountered your work and, indeed, the work of all the other people that I’ve just picked up and, and, and bought in the pandemic period and that was my education. 

But of all these books, yours is different because it takes us, as Sana also said, and, into the kind of like, into the moment where things changed, so the moment that kind of abuts onto the contemporary and the moment, therefore, that is also the moment of questions arising for someone like me, who is a literary critic interested in thinking about postcoloniality and how the afterlife or continuing life of French India, you know, helps us complicate again some, some pretty settled notions of what is the postcolonial in South Asia.

So for sure, I think, the small and powerful band that you’ve talked about is to be, you know, we have to, we have to reckon with this, with this work as a composite but within that because you have done something slightly different you’ve engaged with a moment that perhaps goes beyond the bounds of what is historical, and it’s really moving to the contemporary. And that’s,  that’s why your book gives us another angle into, into the shared set of concerns around how do we understand French India. 

And what you’ve done is, here again, which is very interesting, is you’ve used these, as you said, these three narratives, different, intertwined narratives, which the documentary that you talk, that you start with talking about the documentary about French India made by French people two years, barely two years, after Pondicherry has become absorbed into India. There are three worlds, and you show how those three words, particularly the third world, which is the world of ashram and Auroville, are very deeply intimately intertwined with those other words, which are of kind of French, French India and Tamil French India. 

And so what’s really important is, again as Sana pointed out, that final chapter which pushes all those detailed stuff you’re doing to tell us about how French, French India and Tamil French India came into being, including those milestones of you know, French, the French State inviting Indians to renounce aspects of their traditional, you know, culture and become  French and all those milestones you talked about. 

But the point is that you’re pushing forward and bringing us into the ‘60s, which is when most of us think of nation building in India happening in a completely different way, and you are really shining a spotlight to stuff that’s happening pretty centrally because Pondicherry is situated bang in the middle of the Deccan, and it’s not, you know, while we can, we can say you know, we can say similar stories can be said about say the Lakshadweep or Andamans, it’s kind of in the heart of the peninsula and on the coastline. And, therefore, you know, it can’t be invisibilized. We can’t not talk about, we can’t not want to know what’s going on there, but we don’t know how to know. We don’t know anything. We don’t know where to go. We don’t know the language. We don’t know where the archives are. You do a fantastic job of showing us the scattered archives, which isn’t, you know, all over, you know where do we even begin stitching the archives together.

And so, you know, that scattering which characterizes French India, you make a bonus point out of that, you know. You actually say scattered and fragmented and disjointed the whole thing, maybe, but actually let’s start from there, because that is the meaning of your wanting to talk about minor histories, minor methods, minor, the margins, which are as, as you say constructed, as the center.

So for me, this was really um, I think this was one of the key methodological advances of your book that you’re not frustrated by the scattered nature of the material dealing with, including the territories itself, which, as you showed in the maps, even Pondicherry itself is an enclave of enclaves, you know. It’s a fragment of fragments. So, you know you, you actually say, well that’s the way it is. What do we make of that experience? What does it do to people who live in those spaces when their villages are divided by rock boundaries? So, you know, you’ve managed really to, to say well that’s the state of play. How do we write the history that deals with these fragments and put them straight into, you know, how we rethink centrality? 

So the minor is not just useful because it remains minor. The minor is like a lever to take us to another like perspective, all together, on what we thought was central, and so we reassess the whole system. And actually that’s pretty much also I think what I found was important, when you say India is not a settler colony, but imperial settlements were common throughout South Asia. And from there, you actually take Auroville itself as a, you know, a latter day settlement of this kind. 

Now what you do there is then make us rethink settler colonialism itself. So we don’t have to say, this is another kind of thing going on in India. We actually go back to the theoretical understanding of settler colonialism as a phenomenon, and we have to rethink it because you’ve written this great book, which has all the evidence, you know, to help us do that. So I think these are the methodological moves that you make that are actually really key to thinking about the utility of the world for the rest of us.

I really like that part when you are going empirically into thinking about the fences that were constructed around the enclaves by the British. And then, people are saying, but are these fences like demarcating the British from the French or the French from the British. I mean that kind of, you know, that sort of, you know, this is a sort of realization of the disruption of certainties. This is why your book is disrupting everything because even though that granular level you’re showing how these very strong statements made by these imperial powers were totally like ambivalent because you don’t know, actually, what is the, what is demarcating what from what.

So um I think I’ve, I’m surely coming up to my ten minutes, and we want so many, we have Jayita to also say her part. So, I think what I want to say is I’ll just leave us with a few questions, which of course, we are all, we were all asked to talk about questions and bring questions. One of my questions have already been stolen by Sana because, of course, I too wanted to have a bit broader sense of what is this outlier Chandannagar. You know, how do we like, how do we reckon with the decisions that were maken, made by Chandannagar, by the people of Chandannagar, which was so kind of like, you know, like off pace in a way from the rest of French India? Is it because of Bengal, or you know, whatever? So your views on that would be interesting, of course.

But then I thought, maybe also what I want to ask is then thinking, thinking about Pondicherry then in its sort of Southern space and how it would connect up with the, yeah absolutely, the history of Portuguese India, because, as you show, even the early phase of creating a French kind of person in India was so linked with the people, the Métis, you know, women who are already the product of Portuguese and Indian, you know, kind of interactions. So there’s a kind of very early, a foundational kind of input of the Portuguese in India. 

And Ari, Ari, the work that Ari and I have done on the Le Thinnai Kreyolk, we go back to that a lot, even in the language. When you, you know, when Ari’s book talks about the creoles of Pondicherry, you can see that even that the surnames they hold, they’re Portuguese. They’re Iberian surnames. So there’s a lot of like this, the lived understanding that somewhere Portuguese-ness is part of this picture.

And then, of course, there’s a temporality because Portugal cedes Goa around the same time, officially, as India, as, as India absorbs, you know, French India, French enclaves. So there’s something there, which I think would make for a very interesting story, maybe. I know you’re working on other things now, but this would be another great follow up book.

And finally, of course, I must ask you to tell us a little bit about how you are rethinking or maybe you’ve returned to the notion of creolization, which, in your book you kind of closed off a little bit because, at a certain point, you did say that the situation is quite different. I think I’ve earmarked the page. And you’ve said, can’t find it now. But, you know, you know, exactly where, you know, you, you, you, you say that what’s going on in, with creolization in the rest of French India doesn’t quite hold in India. And so, you know, not, and you kind of leave it there, though we talk, you talk a lot about the creole groups and creolized groups. So I don’t know whether hanging out together with all of us these past two years, we’ve had so many, you know, we’ve learnt a lot together, I don’t know whether you would be thinking differently or opening that question again of how you felt there could be a place for thinking about Creole Indians through Pondicherry.

So, I’ll stop there. Thanks again for this brilliant book and, and looking forward to, to, to the, to the rest of the discussion. Thanks.

>> Sarkar: Frankly, I just want to listen to Jessica’s responses instead of sharing my thoughts, but I will keep my comments quite short, so we can hear what you think about all the things that Sana and Ananya has raised.

So thank you Jessica, once again, for, for writing Unsettling Utopia. It was a gripping read about the ongoing processes of decolonization in South Asia. And it was really interesting and exciting to see how you’re challenging the conventional narratives of what imperial exits, exits in plural, mean and the emergence of the postcolonial Indian nation state, what it meant to the people, pardon me, their identities, legal statuses, and for their mobility.

And, as you know, I’m a big fan of your work, and I’ve read it when it came out last summer. And I reread sections of it with my students this semester in Global South Asia, and thank you, also once again for joining our class. So I’m going to keep my comments very brief and really three parts.

So I’ll start by discussing what Unsettling Utopia has been doing, speaking to decolonization and decolonial history. Then some themes will come up again, because I think that’s one of your call to action in the book and in your scholarship, generally speaking. Second, how the book fits into the contestations over immigration and colonial legacies in France and the contestations over citizenship in India. And finally, I’d like to hear your thoughts on, you know, the concept of settler utopianism, and I think that is something that all of us have been thinking about. And I think Sana’s comments about thinking comparatively with Gandhi’s ashram Sabarmati and his farms in South Africa, something I didn’t think about. I was thinking about ISKCON, but I think, you know, we’d love to hear more about the application of this, you know remarkable concept beyond Aurobindo Ashram.

So in Unsettling Utopia, Jessica Namakkal bravely paves the path for future scholarship on decolonization and decolonial histories by challenging previously held notions of national identity, citizenship, subjecthood, settlers, migrants, tourists, to name a few. Her call to action is to decolonize history by disentangling decolonization as a phenomenon from conventional understandings of time, space, and scale, right. Non-British territories, the French and the Portuguese, did not witness a transfer of power in August 1947, and we tend to forget that.

And the identities and belongingness of those who’ve lived in this [inaudible] were very different from the presidencies of Calcutta, Bombay, Madras and yet very different from those in the princely states.

Nehru did not want a moth-eaten India, and it did not get one either, right. But that meant that the processes or decolonization in the subcontinent have to be, be an ongoing process of contestations over territory and belonging through legal, editorial, military, and paramilitary means. And Jessica powerfully shows how that played out in the case of the [inaudible] in the Deccan Peninsula after Chandannagar’s overwhelming support to join the Indian Union in June 1949 referendum. 

Interestingly, you know, as I was preparing my remarks, I found that even in the Chandannagar referendum, the process was contested, even though the outcome was not. It was presumably easier to find pink chits that said no to join the French Union than it was to find white chits to say yes to join the French Union, right. So this is so interesting and then there is not much discussion of that either.

Second, the book tackles the contestations over citizenship and subjecthood head on, bringing to the fore the hybrid, hyphenated and complex belongingness of the people who lived in [inaudible]. Unsettling Utopia, I think, could not have arrived at a more poignant time 

when citizenship has been contested in India through the 2019 Citizenship Amendment Act and the very well known discomfort in France with respect to its own colonial legacy, most recently depicted through the 2021 Stora Report in Algeria. So, I think by, by discussing the otherization of French Indians on racial grounds in France, who often find camaraderie with Sri Lankan Tamils in the [inaudible] of Paris, Jessica skillfully brings the anti-immigration politics of twentieth and twenty-first century France in direct conversation with histories of empire and decolonization. I think that’s truly fascinating and really important. The two have different silos, different historiographical world, and even, even in different disciplines. So, history versus sociology, that’s, that’s what’s going on there.

And I think here I’d like to mention this book that just came out last month, Empire on the Seine by Amit Prakash, Policing of North Africans in Paris, and I think that also brings the conversation of anti-immigration politics and the metropole and with histories of empire and decolonization. 

And so these entanglements that Jessica talks about, of Frenchness, Indianness, Tamilness, through cosmopolitan mobility on the, on the one hand, and the racialized, boundedness on the other, really makes Unsettling Utopia thought provoking on almost on every page. And I’m not going to start at the beginning or the end. It’s just amazing throughout. Third and finally, and here is probably the only question I have, you know, you have a full plate already, is the concept of settler utopianism, and I think that’s fascinating and powerful, and I do think it has applicability beyond Mother and Aurobindo. So, in some ways of picking up the conversation, where we had left off last time we discussed your book at BU, I have been thinking how to apply this concept of settler utopianism to make sense of transnational white or white normative spirituality networks that also involve large infrastructure projects using local light labor and land with foreign capital and an alien spiritual expertise, right.

Perhaps one way to do that is to foreground histories of capitalism with histories of decolonization, and I’d love to hear what you think of that, and also I’ll make one quick remark. I think you, I’ve heard you speak today, and you know, elsewhere that when you talk about settler colonialism in India, you become defensive and you say, well I’m not saying India is settler colonialism, and we don’t have that. But I think you know, we had a conversation, a few years ago, I think Sana and one of the attendees, maybe Kalyani was part of it, where we were talking about, you know, these categories of settler, migrant refugees. They’re, they are so mobile. They are so dynamic.

And then, if I bring the discussion of Adivasis and indigenous land in it, I think settler colonialism is a useful category to make sense of Indian polity, so I would probably not shy away from that. Anyway, thank you again for your excellent book, and I look forward to your discussion.

>>  Namakkal: Thank you everyone. I know we’re short on, short on time. And, so, I would maybe just quickly respond to what I, all three of you mentioned, and then I know Elizabeth just sent a message about extending a little bit.

So thank you everyone. These are amazing comments. Um, you know, I’ll just start exactly where, Jay, you just left off, which is when I, when I say India wasn’t a settler colony, I sort of mean British India. And, in fact, I explicitly don’t mean India, because I think if we talk about Kashmir, I think if we talk about the Northeast, people who aren’t me because I’m not doing that research should certainly make claims about India, you know, India, being the power that is settling. So I do think those rubrics are so important. I also get what you’re saying about defense. 

But um but I, I expanded on the settler utopianism idea a little bit in an essay for the LA Review of Books, which I’ll drop in the chat if anyone’s interested. But that is actually what I’m working on. So the next projects, decolonized cults, doesn’t, isn’t really, anyways, this is what it is—ISKCON, Osho, all of these places. And, and I hadn’t thought about Gandhi in South Africa with, that is, thank you, Sana, that’s certainly something to think about in here, right. Because I mean, Jay, you know you mentioned sort of the whiteness of the spiritual practices and, of course, you know the interesting thing about Auroville in a lot of ways is you had, you know, most of the communal projects were being started in, in North America and in Australia, to a certain extent, New Zealand, in places that were already set up a colony. So, it was abnormal for like a European driven commune to be founded in India, right. Like Osho, that, they, they really appealed to Europeans, but Osho, you know, wasn’t, was an Indian. 

So you know I also think, for Auroville, like that, an interesting question because people are Indian who live there, and I think, maybe, this will get us to the Aurobindo Ghosh, Bengal question, to a certain extent, which is like, you know, what is, who, what does it mean to be a Indian, right. What is this? And you know I’ve been really thinking about Manan Asif’s book—The Loss of Hindustan—to think about sort of the, the longer narrative here of what this territory is and what it becomes in this, these nation building moments. But you know people in Auroville are Indian, and they’re European, and they’re all these other things, and you know kinda of cosmopolitan, and it’s the utopianism of cosmopolitanism.

But anywhere, this is built on some sort of labor exploitation, right. So I mean the history of capitalism, point is, is much, much needed I think in thinking about that. But that is the next project. That’s what I’m doing. So, I hope to address a lot of the things there. 

Should I, should we ask, take questions, Elizabeth? Does that make most sense? Since we’re like . . .

>> Lhost: Yeah, I think it’d be nice. I just sent a message out to everyone saying we’ll extend the conversation about 10 minutes past our scheduled stopping time. So, please do submit your questions that you have for Jessica, for the other panelists using the Q&A feature. 

I believe.

>> Namakkal: It.

>> Lhost: Sathvik has one question for you, if you’re ready for it.

>> Namakkal: Yeah, I’m ready.

>> Lhost: It says, prior to the departure of the French from Puducherry, they offered French citizenship to the Tamil natives and around 6,000 took up that offer. Can you, can you say more about the motivations of these natives of French India who were pro-French and maybe somewhat anti-independence? 

>> Namakkal: Yeah, so it’s not, I don’t, it’s not that they were anti-independence. It was that, they, they were attached to being French, right. And it, you know, it’s a, you know, you have the, you have the perspective of the French administrators who were discussing what they thought. You know, so they had a, they had a narrative they wanted to present, and it wasn’t just in the French territories. This was throughout their colonies and, you know, Sana mentioned Fred Cooper’s work, Between Empire and Citizenship, something like that is what it’s called, and you know you can read about similar conversations in French West Africa.

So these conversations are happening because what the French do is they present the idea of the French Union as a foundation of the Fourth Republic. It was a way to maintain, much like the British Commonwealth, almost exactly like the British Commonwealth, but with more suffrage, right, maintain the networks that they had created throughout empire, right. 

So it’s, it wasn’t, one of the things I try to show in the book is like it wasn’t necessarily anti, it, what, didn’t mean people weren’t anticolonial to want to vote for the French Union, right. Because the question for them, these people living in South India, and we’ll take Chandannagar out of this conversation, but for people living in South India right, the question of do I want to be ruled by a central government in Delhi, I’m right, or do I want to continue to have this relationship to France, who has offered me citizen, my family’s citizenship for a long time.

So you know 6,000, it was, it was about five or six percent. So it’s, you know, it’s pretty small when you think about the population that, that took them up on that. It was poorly advertised.

You had to have a lot of documents, right. So, it was never going to reach the amount of people it would reach today, and there are still active struggles for people to claim this citizenship. And that’s something that’s ongoing. 

But you know, some people who had means and really, you know, they spoke French, they went to the Lycée, they did all of the things, they moved, they moved to France. Many had served in the military, in the French military. They often did migrate. And the people that stayed, you know, and a lot of it has to do with caste, right. Do I want again to be ruled by, even if it’s a secular government, government, a Hindu government or do I want to take my chance with France, right. Chance with France, maybe we’ll call it. 

And so there were a lot of motivations actually to vote for the French Union, and the Indian Government was doing a bad job of appealing to people in the South. You know, I mean, it was really this argument of you’re, you’re our brothers. We are, we are blood, right. And so, if you are a Dalit, right, maybe that just doesn’t speak to you at all. So there’s a fair amount of people there thinking about what it would mean to retain some sort of French. 

You know I think the other reason it was a low number was because, because people didn’t know what would happen. And in the final, so, 1954 is the year France agrees to leave.

They don’t ratify it until they lose Algeria in 1962. So that’s actually, you can see how hard France was trying to retain the empire, right. But people didn’t know and those, you know, ’52 to ’54, India is, you know, they’re employing sanctions on Pondicherry, things, you know people aren’t getting things.

Nobody knew, if you, they would get kicked out, right. If you’re a French citizen, nobody knew what was going to happen with citizenship. There was no dual citizenship. Right, what happens? Can you keep living there? If you don’t have money you know, and you can’t move to France, which takes an enormous amount of resources, right, what are you going to do? 

So, I think there’s amount of, a good amount of fear there. So I think it was more popular than then that percentage actually allows to some extent, and so I hope that answered that question.

>> Lhost: Thanks, we have a, we have a question from Lydia Walker, who asks if you might say a bit more about the difference between decolonization and independence, and particularly how those concepts relate to different temporal moments—1947, 1954, 1961—that have very different meanings in South Asia and also thinking about the French empire, more broadly, in relation to Indochina, Algeria, and can you say a bit more about those terms, as they relate both to political and theoretical transformations.

>> Namakkal: Yeah, thank you, Lydia. That’s a wonderful question, one I’ve been thinking about a lot. You know, they don’t, I, you, never see the word decolonization in, in what’s going on, in the archival documents for this period in French India. Nobody talks about decolonization.

You know, thinking about the, the history of the term, thinking about Stewart Lord’s article about the sort of intellectual history of the word decolonization, the way that it, you know, he argues that it’s really a diplomatic term, term until Fanon imbues it with a radical sentiment in The Wretched of the Earth, which seems fairly accurate. It’s a term that actually comes from France and gets picked up. It’s from, actually, the first use of it is in the 1840s about the, the settlement in Algeria, and it gets taken up again as it’s sort of a diplomatic term in British circles in the early nineteenth or the early 1900s.

And for actually, for Pondicherry, for French India, it really gets used in the sense of that original meaning as a diplomatic diplomatic process, right, of bureaucrats talking about the formal end of empire. Who’s going to, you know, where’s the military going to go? What are we going to do with our economic ties, right, all of these questions. So this really, you know, is a question of sovereignty and independence.

But of course we have this, these are French spaces, to a certain extent. They’re unique French spaces, but they are Francophone spaces, and so you actually have, especially in Indochina, and then, of course, Algeria, you have these radical ideas circulating because of Fanon and Cesaire, and these other French intellectuals. So it does enter this sort of the conversation amongst people. There’s quite a few Pondicherrians who live in Indochina. And, you know, they’re not really a radical leftist bunch. The Communists are mostly in Pondicherry. But, but they start, say sort of get these ideas.

The question of Algeria becomes really important and here, not only because the timeline of independence in French India does mirror the, after the French leave Indochina, lose Indochina, they agree to leave French India. And then in 1962, you know, they lose Algeria, they ratify it then. And so it does follow that temporality and we can’t talk about French India without Algeria and Indochina. 

But also in the negotiations between the Nehru Government and the French Government, Algeria is a big problem because Nehru, you know, as a leader of the non-aligned movements is in solidarity with Algerians. You know, he, he wants to support them, but he’s, he also wants to create a good postcolonial relationship with France, and Jay can probably tell us more about those relationships. But Algeria becomes a big political problem for him in that sense. Like what are you going to do with the students in Pondicherry that you, there were anticolonial student movements in Pondicherry, who are saying, you know, get rid of the French? How does he support them but also, right, not stepping the boundaries, with what he said he would do with France, right? They want to do something easy in India, because France is dealing with all these other places, right. 

So, so, I think that, that is interesting, I mean the last, the last thing I’ll say about this, and I think there’s so much more to think about Lydia is, of course, you know, when we talk about decolonization now we have the sort of Fanonian meeting, and then we have the meaning that’s been talked about a lot by indigenous, global indigenous movements, who call for land back, who are calling, you know, for, for territorial sovereignty, who talk about decolonization not being a metaphor, right. 

So I did take all of that very seriously in the writing of the book, even though it’s, you know, anachronistic for the character, the archives. But I took it very seriously by centering the land in Auroville and even the land in Pondicherry that the ashram buys, the property that they buy, to think, you know, if I’m doing this work now, which I hope is in acts in solidarity with decolonization, we think about land, and we think about what it means for people who had land, who became dispossessed, right. So I, I hoped that I will get into them, to the method that way.

 >> Lhost: Yeah, thanks. I think we have one, time for one last question before we wrap up, even though we’re already over time. But this question asks you to think about the place of Auroville within contemporary debates about cultural appropriation and decolonization within the sort of new age modern yoga, wellness discourses that are circulating today. Can you say a bit more about how your work on Auroville and the ashram fits into some of these debates and where, where you see those debates resonating in your own work?

>> Namakkal: Yeah, thanks Phillip. And that, you know, that might be an answer, I ask you, Phillip. 

But, but so Auroville, I mean, I think these questions are really important for Auroville and again, you know, partly because this is people who go to India. And, you know, if people have read Karma Cola, the book from the 1970s, it’s, it’s funny, you know, which is a bit of a parity book, but it like, it gets the language that people use going to India in the 1970s quite well, right. And, you know, I think when you’re in India opposed to being in the maybe the ISKCON spaces or in, you know, Rajneeshpuram in Oregon or something like this, you’re within that you’re, you know, you’re fully within this area. So the, like a dawning of special clothing and all of these things becomes like, it goes head to head a little bit more.

You know, this may be actually, this will get to the question that Ananya had about or maybe Hassan, I mean this is your question about secularism, sorry, too because the mother made it very clear that Auroville was not a religion. There was no religions, over and over again. It is spiritual, right. And this is, actually, the really slippery part for people that live in the area, right, or who wanted, maybe to join, or who are wondering how to like get in on what’s going on there. They have all these resources.

And it’s, it’s a spirituality, that is, you know approved of by, by specific people, right. And so I think that appropriation question is really interesting there because The Mother, you know she’s this figure who, for better or worse, like really holds fast to a lot of you know, I think we could just call them Orientalist ideas, about what India is, right. It’s sort of a land of spirituality. She’s imbued with it by being in the land, right. 

She, you know, she brought a lot of European practices, you know, everybody plays tennis. Everybody, everybody does all of these calisthenics. They, you know, they sing the French national anthem. They sing the Indian national anthem, so that you know sort of these traditional ideas in some way, but she thinks that you know that, you, but, you know, she’s using the land, the language of shakti, she’s using the language of the divine and, like all of these ideas that you know Aurobindo was sort of picking and choosing from various traditions. And I’m not an Aurobindo scholar, so people can defend the thought all they want. 

But so, you know, I, you know, I don’t know that reads always as appropriation, right. She’s sort of creating a new thing, but what is it you know, is I think a question that we can ask. When I was in Auroville doing research, there were like, I took yoga from a Russian woman. You know, it’s like, it’s, it’s their communal way to do these things.

So I don’t know, I think, I think, maybe in some senses, it disrupts our thinking about appropriation being a one to one sort of relationship and to think about like how complex it is when cultures change and should it matter who’s sort of the engine of change there. But you and I can talk about this later perhaps.

>> Lhost: Yeah, thanks Jessica. So we have a couple of questions that are remaining and those of you who submitted them, I will pass them onto Jessica and the other panelists so that they can follow up with you. I regret that we don’t have, you know, tons of endless time for this conversation to continue, but I would like you to join me in thanking our author and our panelists for coming out for this discussion today.

And if you would like to join us on May 10, we’ll be back for a discussion on Shenila Khoja-Moolji’s book Sovereign Attachments, which just won I believe two prizes from the APSA. So registration is available for that event online and hope to see you there.

>> Namakkal: Thank you.

>> Aiyar: Thank you.

>> Sarkar: Thank you everyone! Take care.

Conversations on South Asia with Shenila Khoja-Moolji

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Tuesday, May 10 | 12:15–1:15 pm EDT (Zoom)

How do politics and emotion intersect? How might our understandings of sovereignty change if we account for feelings and emotions? How is gender mobilized in assertions of sovereignty?

Making the Pakistani state and Pakistan-based Taliban her objects of study, Shenila Khoja-Moolji (Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies, Bowdoin College) contemplates these questions in her award-winning book, Sovereign Attachments: Masculinity, Muslimness, and Affective Politics in Pakistan (University of California Press, 2021), by paying particular attention to state and non-state cultural productions that shape national publics.

Join us to hear more!

Zahra Ayubi (Religion, Dartmouth College), Marya Hannun (Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, Georgetown University) will be joining the author for this conversation.

Elizabeth Lhost (History, Dartmouth College) will moderate.

Register online to attend: https://dartgo.org/conversations-khoja-moolji

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This event is sponsored by the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund | the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program | and the Department of History at Dartmouth College.

All are welcome to attend.

Conversations on South Asia with Kyle Gardner

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Tuesday, March 8 from 12:15–1:15 pm ET (via zoom)

For decades, India and China have been uneasy neighbors, wrestling over shared claims to the region of Ladakh. From the war in 1962 that established the line of actual control (LAC) to a recent skirmish in summer 2020, questions over how to draw the India-China border continue to plague national interests and international security.

Digging into the long history of this contested space, in The Frontier Complex: Geopolitics and the Making of the India–China Border, 1846–1962 (Cambridge University Press, 2021), Kyle Gardner (Sigur Center for Asian Studies, George Washington University) shows how today’s conflicts resulted, in part, from the cartographic ambiguities of imperial legacies.

Join the author, in conversation with Ambassador Nirupama Menon Rao (former Indian Foreign Secretary) and Michael Kugelman (Deputy Director and Senior Associate for South Asia at the Wilson Center), to learn more.

Elizabeth Lhost (Dartmouth College) will moderate the discussion.

Register to attend: https://dartgo.org/conversations-gardner

This event is sponsored by the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund | the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program | the Dickey Center for International Understanding | and the Department of History at Dartmouth College.

All are welcome to attend.

Event Recording: Conversations on South Asia with Mytheli Sreenivas

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https://youtu.be/RT-kqJbWcQY

For those who weren’t able to join us for this event, here’s the recording and transcript. Enjoy!

Transcript for Conversations on South Asia with Mytheli Sreenivas

> > Lhost: Hello, everyone and welcome to the November event in the Conversations on South Asia series here at Dartmouth College. I’m Elizabeth Lhost, a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Society of Fellows and a lecturer in the Department of History here at Dartmouth, and I’m also one of the series co-organizers for this year. 

It is my distinguished pleasure to welcome you all to this event featuring Mytheli Sreenivas’s Reproductive Politics and the Making of Modern India, which was published with the University of Washington Press earlier this year. And event attendees can use the promo code w139 to receive a 30% discount when ordering the book directly from the press. We’re very grateful to have them make this available to attendees of the event. The book is also available as an open access text, which was made possible by generous support from a Project TOME grant. Very exciting to see more works coming out with open access editions for students and scholars who are unable to purchase books. Professor Sreenivas also informs me that, after some pandemic related delays, Reproductive Politics is now available for purchase in a South Asian edition through Women Unlimited. And we have a special link that we will put in the chat very shortly to share with all of you to buy that book directly from the publisher.

Before we begin, I would like to acknowledge that Dartmouth College, which hosts the series, sits on the ancestral and unceded lands of the Abenaki people, who are members of the Wabanaki confederacy. I would also like to thank our series sponsors: the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund, the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages program, and the Department of History at Dartmouth College for supporting this program, and I’d especially like to thank Bruch Lehmann and Britny (Town) Marsh for their support with logistics.

Momentarily, I’ll hand over the platform to my colleague Professor Douglas Haynes, who will be introducing our panelists and moderating the Q&A today. But before I do that, I would like to thank our two Bodas Fellows Sri Sathvik Rayala and Bryanna Entwistle, who are working and have been working behind the scenes to make sure the program runs smoothly today, so please join me in acknowledging their contributions.

I would also like to announce that the complete schedule for the conversation series is available on our website, which is sites.dartmouth.edu/southasiastudies and you’ll see a link to the conversation series on the left hand side. And I’d also like to announce that our next event featuring Nicole Karapanagiotis’s Branding Bhakti will take place on Tuesday, December 7 from 12:15 to 1:15 PM Eastern and registration is available at the link dartgo.org/conversations-karapanagiotis, and we’ll also put that in the chat so that you can access it pretty easily.

Finally, for those of you who can never quite get enough of South Asia events in your lives, Professor Haynes has also asked me to announce that on Thursday, this Thursday, just two days from now, he will be hosting a conversation with Kavita Sivaramakrishnan on India’s second COVID wave with reflections on a longer history of epidemics and erasures. So we’ll post information about that event in the chat so that those of you who are interested may attend.

And now, without further delay, on to our panel discussion. Today, we have joining us the author Mytheli Sreenivas, and two discussants. Each panelist will provide roughly ten minutes of comments and reflections on the book, beginning with the author. And then we’ll open up the floor to questions and comments from the audience. When submitting your questions, please use the Q&A feature in the Zoom webinar to submit your questions and now please welcome my colleague Douglas Haynes, who will be introducing our distinguished speakers.

> > Haynes: Thank you, thank you very much. I’m very pleased to be moderating this this event, about a book, I read, several months ago, not just in preparation for this occasion. Besides all the thanks that Elizabeth has already mentioned, I want to thank Elizabeth herself for organizing this event and for all the work she’s done in putting together this Conversation on South Asia series, which I think is really a unique contribution to South Asian studies, not just at Dartmouth, but actually globally. And, and I hope we are able to keep it, keep it going in the years, in the future future years.

Today, we’re pleased to have with us Professor Mytheli Sreenivas, who is an Associate Professor at Ohio State University. Her work focuses on women’s and gender history, and more recently on the history of sexuality and reproduction. Her first book, Wives, Widows, and Concubines: The Conjugal Family Ideal in Colonial India, is the most critical work on the history of conjugality in modern South Asia, and it showed how the advocacy of the conjugal family became central to the constitution of modernity and nationalism in South Asia. And it certainly has been extremely valuable in my own work, which deals with conjugality in advertising. 

Her second and latest book, the Reproductive, Reproductive Politics and the Making of Modern India, the subject of today’s discussion, we’ll hear plenty about that. But it has immediately established itself as the most important study of the history of birth control and reproductive politics in India.

She’s also published numerous journal articles and book chapters, including works on conjugality and reproduction, but also very broad historiographic essays. We have with us two very appropriate commentators to reflect on this work, and we will go in this order.

The first is Amna Qayyum, who is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Jackson Institute for Global Affairs at Yale University. Her primary field of study is twentieth century global history, with a particular focus on decolonization and the Cold War in South Asia and the Muslim world. Her research and teaching interests include the histories of gender, science and technology, development, and Islamic thought. Her current book project, tentatively titled “Demographic States: The Global Biopolitics of Authoritarianism in South Asia,” offers insight into how postcolonial sovereignty intersected it with and disrupted global bio, bio-political projects by situating Pakistan and Bangladesh as critical participants in the production of global demographic knowledge and practices and recently she’s also advised the Government of Pakistan on Covid-19 related human security.

After after comments from Amna, we’ll have comments from Carole McCann, who is a Professor and Chair of Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies at the University of Maryland-Baltimore with an affiliate faculty appointment in the doctoral program in Language, Literacy and Culture Doctoral Program. Professor McCann’s work involved, involves, among other things, transnational feminist theory, transnational feminist science studies, and population/reproductive politics. She has published two books, including Figuring the Population Bomb and Birth Control Politics in the United States, 1916-1945. I’m sorry, that’s, that was two books. And she also co- co-edits the Feminist Theory Reader: Local and Global Perspectives, and she’s joined the editorial team for the 2021 edition. So I’ll be very interested in hearing what Dr. Qayyum and Professor McCann have to say about this, this compelling work, but first we turn to Professor Sreenivas to hear ten minutes of summary of her own, her own work, and then thoughts on her work.

> > Sreenivas: Thank you so much, and thank you so much to the organizers of the Conversations on South Asia series, especially Elizabeth Lhost for organizing this talk and for being so supportive. I’m also really grateful to Carole McCann, Amna Qayyum, and Doug Haynes for engaging with the book, and I look forward to your comments and conversation.

Following Elizabeth, I’ll also start with a land acknowledgment. You know these events seem like they’re happening everywhere and nowhere. But I want to acknowledge the place from which I speak, which is Columbus, Ohio, which occupies the ancestral and contemporary territory of the Shawnee, Pottawatomie, Delaware, Miami, Peoria, Seneca, Wyandot, Ojibwe, and Cherokee peoples. As an employee of Ohio State, I want to honor the resiliency of these tribal nations and recognize the historical context that have and continue to affect the indigenous peoples of this land.

And so, turning to the book itself, as, as Professor Haynes mentioned, I was asked to talk or introduce the book a little bit for folks who may not have, have read it and broadly speaking, it has its roots in how I experienced and learned about India as the child of Indian immigrant parents, back in the 70s and 80s. Overpopulation was my family’s answer to nearly every question I asked when visiting India during my childhood summers, from why the buses were more crowded than what I was used to to why poverty seems so visible to me as the child of American suburbs.

In short, overpopulation was the go-to explanation for why India was the way it was. But more insidiously, it was an explanation that suggested inevitability. How else could India be given its population size?

Revisiting these childhood memories as a historian, I began to wonder about the history of this hegemonic idea that had been my explanation for India for so long. And I started reading some work both in population history and in feminist critiques of population control policy, including, of course, Carole McCann’s work on the gendering of demography. And from here, it was a short step to recognizing, as others have before me, that population was always also a reproductive question. So human numbers are about how many children are born, how many die, and all the social, cultural, corporeal, and gendered practices that are associated with these births and deaths.

Population, in other words, is a reproductive justice issue. Indeed, much of the foundational feminist work on women’s and gender history in South Asia has engaged with reproductive questions, though they’re not always named as such. So, there is importantly, and, of course, the historiography of birth control, including the foundational work of Sanjam Ahluwalia and Sarah Hodges. There’s also a wider range of research that examines reproductive politics, so the controversies around child marriage and widow remarriage, the scandal around Mayo’s Mother India, the reform of Hindu laws of marriage and inheritance are just some of those examples. So, this was the conceptual space from which I wrote the book. 

A question about the hegemonic idea of overpopulation, a recognition that the history of population must also be a history of reproductive politics and a connection between this work and the broader field of South Asian Women’s and Gender Studies. My goal was to write a history of modern India that put reproduction at its center. I believe that many of the core questions we ask about the 19th and 20th centuries, about colonial rule and anti-colonial thought, about inequality and hierarchy, about economic development, about decolonization and post-colonialism, are also questions of and about reproductive politics.

With that goal in mind, for the rest of my time today, I’ll highlight a few interventions that I see the book making. And I’ll talk about each of these in brief and just list them first off. They’re about the question of chronology for a modern history of reproductive politics, the centrality of India to obstensively global change, the place of feminist activism and population control programs that were effectively anti-women, the intersection of histories of heterosexuality with histories of economy and development and, finally, the implications of this history for our current moment of climate crisis and resurgent populationist discourse.

So, my first point is that we need our histories to have longer time horizons. We tend to see population and reproductive politics as mid-20th century concerns. They seem to arise from transnational population control networks and the national developmentalist state, both in India and elsewhere in South Asia and across the Global South. However, I argue in the book that reproduction as a modern political question was first asked and answered in the process of imperial consolidation in the late-nineteenth century. In other words, Malthusian fears that India was an overpopulated place took hold alongside the conditions created when the Indian colony became part of global systems of food and finance, of agrarian production and capitalist markets ushered in by the British Empire. These fears of overpopulation became entrenched in Indian political culture, even though the population itself was not increasing in the late-nineteenth century.

This brings me to my second point about the book’s findings, which concern the place of India in the global history of reproductive politics. Histories of population and reproduction, even those taking a transnational approach, often tend to center the West. The result is that the rest, even if understood to be important, become, in effect, sort of local spaces, where global—that is Western forces—are enacted. Within such analyses, India becomes a preeminent site for global population control measures or—at most—a sight of collaboration between Western and Indian elites. However, in working on this book, I came to see something different, that is, India was not simply a local place for global politics, reproductive politics was enacted. Instead, I argue that historical conditions in India prompted a reproductive politics with global aspirations to take shape. This was true, for instance, in the mid-twentieth century when the International Planned Parenthood Federation was founded in Bombay with the goal of taking the transnational birth control movement in more explicitly Indian directions. And I start the book with an anecdote about that, and for the founders, Dhanvanthi Rama Rau and Margaret Sanger, this meant a focus on population control as the rationale for contraception. There are a lot of other examples, but in short, I’m interested in how Indian conditions helped to define the meaning and purposes of reproductive control transnationally.

This brings me to a third point of intervention. The history of reproductive politics implicates and is deeply implicated in histories of feminism. Many scholars and activists have made clear that the history of birth control was not a simple sort of trajectory from subjection to freedom in any part of the world. Instead, advocacy for contraception, abortion, and maternal and child health sprang from a variety of motivations, for instance Malthusianism and eugenics, sexual radicalism and anti-patriarchal thought, anti-capitalism and socialism, casteism and anti-caste politics. Feminist activists contributed to all these streams of thought about reproductive control. Consequently, there’s no direct line connecting feminist contraceptive advocacy to a progressive politics.

So, my book aims to build on this understanding to show that organized Indian feminists, who’re often overlooked in the history of state-led development, actually, played a pivotal role in putting family planning on the state’s agenda during the early post-colonial decades. And they did so by making it an essential form of economic development to be conducted by middle class women for their subaltern sisters. Recognizing this makes visible a certain kind of paradox. How is it that avowedly feminist activists helped pave the way for state-led population control programs that would ultimately disregard the reproductive health and autonomy of women, especially of Dalit, Adivasi and Muslim women, who are already the most marginalized.

I try to work through some of these thorny questions in the book, and I’m happy to talk about that more in the Q&A. So, the last chapter of the book considers images of the small and happy heterosexual family as they proliferated across public culture from the 1920s to the 1970s. This is my attempt to investigate the sexual politics of India’s family planning machine and, more broadly, to ask about the co-constitution of histories of heterosexuality and economic development. And that chapter takes a lot of inspiration from recent work on Indian sexology and Professor Haynes’s own work has been absolutely pivotal here on sexuality and advertising. I’m interested to identify a politics that mobilized heterosexuality to naturalize certain modes of planning, certain orientations towards time, structures of sexual intimacy and economic rationality, and visions of future consumption. And I have a few examples of these images that I can share in the Q&A as well. 

So lastly, the book’s epilogue learns from the words of rural women in Tamil Nadu, women who have historically been the targets of state-led population control, to consider what this history might mean for the current re-energizing of a populationist discourse in the context of climate change. So I’ll pause for now and turn it over, I think to Amna. 

> > Qayyum: Mytheli, thank you so much for getting us started and giving us such a rich sort of overview in just ten minutes of the book. Also, many thanks to Elizabeth and Doug for the invitation and for giving us a chance to gather here today, and I’m looking forward to being in conversation with Mytheli and Carole over the course of the hour. So, in the interest of time, I think we only have about an hour, so I’ll get started on my comments.

So, I won’t go into summarizing some of the book’s key takeaways because I think Mytheli has done that so well. But I will signal briefly to some of its main historiographic interventions, which I think we should keep in mind as we discuss the work. So, the first is the ambitious temporal arc of the book as Mytheli mentions, spanning from the 1870s to the 1970s. And this, as Mytheli rightly points out in the book, many projects on population and reproduction, including the one that I’m currently writing, they start with post-war or mid-century histories. So, the book is not only a call to arms for us to write histories of reproduction which cross the temporal colonial-postcolonial divide, but it also expertly shows us how reproduction emerges as a terrain on which to enact a framework of politics across this period from famine to child marriage to, obviously in the post-colonial period, national development. So the book also makes a compelling argument for us to think about what family planning means for different actors who are engaged in supporting it. So, from the straight-up link between population and economic development, to different, differing valences of liberation and welfare.

And Mytheli, I would love for you to speak a little bit more about this difference between family planning as liberation versus women’s welfare and what this does is about differences within elite women and their conceptions of the political economy of reproduction. And I guess with that, uh, I guess I’ve already started on my questions and comments, so I have a few more that sort of bunched together, but please feel free to engage with the ones that you think are more productive.

So, my first question is about the ethical and the religious, and I really, really enjoyed reading chapter five about the happy family and the rich detail and, in particular, engagement with the visual sources and thinking about the normative aspects of family planning. And because this is a book which crosses that sort of colonial-postcolonial temporal divide, what struck me most were how debates and re-configurations around Brahmacharya figured in reproductive and birth control thinking. And from what it seems, is that by in the post-war period, they get wedded to the small family norm, and the focus on sexual ethics is increasingly replaced by ideas of consumption and modernization within the soft small family unit. So I’m wondering if you could reflect on this change that happens in the post-war period in the ethical and religious case made for or against family planning. So is family planning mostly about political economy, or are there figures who continue to make a case for it in ethical terms? And I’m thinking here about the Pakistan case which I’m working on and I focus on sort of Islamic modernists who are actively writing about family planning as an ethical project. So I wonder if there are any similarities that we can also draw on from India. And while we are on the subject of religion, also wondering if you could speak a little bit more about the religious and caste dimensions of the postcolonial population control project. So your book and Sanjam Ahulwalia’s book talks about how Muslim and Dalit reproduction was vilified under late colonialism, but what happens to this in post-1947? And what does this tell us about citizen formation in Nehruvian India? So is it vilification of reproduction now packaged along class lines or is religious and caste identity still overtly or covertly targeted in these projects and how?

And then another set of questions has to deal with your work on the global color line, which you bring out so powerfully how Indian actors, including demographers, involved in this project of creating and resisting the notion of a global color line constructed through you know demographic axes of knowledge and mediating debates over migration, among other things. But I wonder if you could speak a little bit and I guess, this is going to be a recurring theme in my questions, about what happens to the global color line in the post-war period. So at their core, mid-century population control is a racializing project, but I’m wondering if we can think through the valences in which racializing forms of knowledge are deployed in different ways in the post-war period.  

And I’ll stop there, one final question about labor. So you bring out a very wide range of actors: feminists, demographers, sexologists, everyday citizens. But I’m wondering if we could think a little bit more about physicians and doctors as well, and how they negotiated their space within a state-led population control project. What relationship did they share with it, and is there a way in which, if we think about labor, so physicians, health visitors and others, we can think about the relationship, rethink some of the relationship between the citizens, the state and population control?

So I think we’ll stop there, and we can have more time for Q&A, and I think should I hand it over to Carole now, yes okay.

> > McCann: Thank you. Thank you very much, and I want to start as well by thanking Elizabeth and Mytheli for and Doug for inviting me to be part of this, and I’m looking forward to the conversation with all of the participants, as well as the panelists. 

I think this book provides a really rich analysis of India within the history of the modern population-imaginary, and that’s an imaginary that I would define that constructs human reproductive impacts on past prosperity is the central problem of the modern world. The ability and obligation to regulate the natural forces of population come to signify the modernity of nations and individuals. And the book’s interrogation of this flawed narrative I think deepens our understanding of the role of numbers within the colonial imagination by situating the calculus of life and death and imperial fiscal management, anti-colonial politics, national development planning, and feminist engagements with them. In so doing, I really do think the book effectively reframes the historiography of mid-20th century family planning population control and feminisms, both by expanding the scope of that history and by placing India at the center of that history. And I should situate my remarks by noting that I am not a student of South Asian history. My engagement with India comes through my interest in demography and in numbers as the language with which modern stories of human reproduction and its impacts are told.

My own work focuses on the epistemic and effective commitments population statistics and the work those statistics do in shaping women’s lives, social worlds and futures, and national futures. I argue that understanding the cultural work of population figures is a vital importance for reproductive justice movements, because population statistics are really tricky tools for social justice movements, because they, while they can reveal inequities, they also conceal the politics that brings statistics to life. And I’ve written about demography’s statistical practices that animated the mid-20th century population crisis and how that configured women’s naturalized bodies as the cause of population excess and thus the site of regulation and that those practices underpinning family planning programs build a binary of contraceptively competent and incompetent women and that that structures so much of feminist engagement around the question of family planning and population control and birth control.

And as part of my work, I do, I have critiqued Western demographic research on Indian population dynamics, perhaps, in fact, committing the, the biases that Mytheli points out in terms of focusing on the West. But that is the perspective I bring to my reading of this book. And from that perspective, I particularly appreciate the expansive archive that Mytheli has compiled. It appropriately centers India and the full range of population’s concerns: death, movement, and birth. And I say it in that order because I think that’s the order in which it captured the attention of imperial governments, anti-colonial actors, and postcolonial nations. Histories of statistics note the 19th century was about quantifying mortality and the value of life and, and, but mostly they ignore the role of India and famine management and epidemic management in that history.

Early 20th century, as Mytheli points out, a history of migrations ignores the South Asian voices that spoke against the drawing of that color global color line. And the mid-20th century population discourse made a fetish of fertility rates and changed human reproductivity. Fertility rates were and often still are conflated with growth rates as if routine death and migration no longer mattered, only the natural excesses of women’s bodies mattered. But the Malthusian spectors of mass misery want war and death haunt mid-20th century futurities.

By beginning of the late 19th century, I think the book really illuminates the long history of the framing of the question of reproduction in India in terms of economic scarcity and want. It really helps us understand that deeply inflected imperial, how deeply inflected and by imperial logics the preoccupations with costs and the value of India’s population are.

And from my point of view, it’s critical to trace the impact of that sedimented imperial logic in the enumeration and aggregation practices by which we convert human events of birth, death, and movement into national rates of mortality, fertility, and migration.

I won’t belabor that point, which I have a tendency to do, but I want to, I want to focus on what I think of as a major contribution to the project of excavating the political inflections of population numbers that is, that the book makes through its really nuanced analysis of the affective and political commitments to national well being, pride, and progress, but both by India’s political leaders and feminist family planning advocates. You know, as she notes, family planning was a means to bridge tensions within the national planning process. It enables claims of poverty alleviation without challenging structural inequities, promoting women’s development without challenging patriarchy, and together these smooth the tensions producing politics of dehumanizing women in terms of population control, and I think the careful analysis of the conjuncture, conjunctures and complexities of Indian feminists in this history is, is really very important.

One point I would want to question, while I agree that and use the same, the 1952 founding of International Planned Parenthood Federation, as that that India is central to shaping the population policy, I also wonder if the analysis leads us to give insufficient weight to the crowds of American demographers and funding that and the weight of that on shaping the definition of and the solution of India’s population problems in the, from the 1950s to the 70s. And I’d be really happy to talk about that, because I think it’s important to consider how we can both center India as a shaper of global policy and fully account for those neo-colonial interventions.

To conclude, as my interest always comes back to how feminist might navigate the terrain of population politics towards justice, I want to highlight that final provocation of the book that I think warrants much further discussion on our part. The epilog brings the human scale back in through the contrast between the promise of future prosperity and family planning programs, contrast it with the precarity of the present that oral history participants cite as underpinning their reproductive decisions. I think that notion of the precarity of the present has the potential to draw our attention back to the structural inequalities and patriarchal constraints that population statistics, population control, family planning discourses alike allied. And in so doing, I think you can open space to effectively challenge the current, the terms of current reproductive politics under late stage capitalism, and I really hope we can talk more about that. 

Thank you. Doug. Oh sorry.

> > Lhost: I was gonna say Mytheli, I’ll give you a minute to respond to some of those questions and comments briefly if you’d like while we gather questions and answers from the audience and for those of you who are in the audience, you can submit questions through the Q&A feature.

> > Sreenivas: Great, I will try to keep my comments pretty brief and hope to cycle back to many of these questions, but first of all, thank you for such a rich sort of engagement with the book and some really wonderful questions for me to keep thinking through, and I think for us to think through together, so thank you for that. Um I think there’s a, as Amna herself pointed out, there’s a number of questions that you raised that are essentially around what’s the relationship between the colonial and the post-war or postcolonial and what changes and what are points of continuity, and I think that’s a really excellent question on a whole, whole number of levels. I’m not going to take up all of those levels, but I sort of welcome for their conversation on that, but I think one one place to think about it has to do with the question that you raised about religious, caste, and class dimensions. And this is something that I’m really kind of curious to keep thinking about because the late colonial period, as many people have shown, I mean certainly Sanjam’s work but also Charu Gupta’s work and others, you know have really sort of made clear that the kind of communal demography that characterize the 1930s and 1940s, has a long life into into sort of postcolonial India and what I was interested in, and we see that long life now right with the, with the really like, I don’t know it was it was communalized before I don’t even know what to call it now, right. I mean it’s sort of like, I don’t know, hyper communalized in the current moment and context right and the sort of current vilification of Muslim populations, in particular, but Dalit populations as well, and I think, so I’ve been wondering about this, in part, because the explicit discourse and rhetoric that I found from the 1950s and 1960s tended to avoid the kind of, the kind of language that we see reemerging from the 1980s and especially 1990s. And I’m trying to figure out what to do with that, like there were these moments that appear once in a while, and I talk about them, where I find them, in the book, you know where some of the the women family planners who go out to talk about you know sort of talk family planning to rural women will sometimes get frustrated and make these kind of side comments about who’s accepting and who’s not accepting family planning. But yet a lot remains I think sort of unsayable in these discourses, and I, this is sort of more of a question than an answer, but I’m sort of not just thinking about pre and post-47 but thinking about this moment of the 1950s and 1960s and national development discourses and what it, what it opens up and what, what it leaves unsaid or kind of under the surface, just as a thought. 

And because I said I would keep my my things brief, I’ll just come to one other point that comes from from Carole’s comments having to do with the place of sort of American demographers and their commitments in these policies, which I would absolutely, I would absolutely agree with and kind of reflecting back on the book, I think, part of, part of the longer chronology, I hope, sort of allows me to situate the American presence, which was my goal, in terms of recognizing that these politics come from a set of collaborations and not only, right, from from a kind of an American intervention. 

But, that being said, I think there’s a lot of room for something that I’ve been thinking about in some future writing and I’m hoping some maybe collaborative writing if folks are interested in in these questions, I am really wanting to be able to situate this shift in the 50s and 60s within a more effectively transnational frame that sort of looks at multiple places over time and and thinks through what a truly transnational history of this process might look like that sort of locally grounded.

So I just want to put that out there for folks who are interested. That’s certainly a project that I would really like to engage in, but I’ll pause there for now, if there are other questions.

> > Haynes: Okay, I don’t think we have questions, yet, but I had, I have reading this book, I had a, had a number of of questions. I guess the one I would like to ask is is about the epilog which Carole mentioned and and where you bring in the oral interviews and, and I wondered whether you know how does the question that really occurs to me is how, how does one engage the perspective of the subaltern and subaltern women in this, in this process and clearly the adoption of reproductive technologies does become more widespread, but a sense is that maybe it has very little to do with the discourses, the elite discourses that you, you talk about through much of your book and so how do we get at how ordinary people are perceiving the issue of reproductive technologies and, and other aspects of the birth control process. So this seems to me the real, a real gap that we have in our in our understanding of the politics.

> > Sreenivas: Yeah, thank you for that. Um I spent a lot of time, when I was writing this book kind of like worried about this exact question because you’re absolutely right. These are a set of elite discourses that operate in a particular space with you know so that some of these, you know, Indian demographers are far more likely, of course, to be talking to American and other demographers than they are to be actually kind of engaging with sort of grassroots or folks on the ground. 

So yes, I think that gap remains, and I think the reason that the epilog exists, was in part to recognize that gap, but I think the, the thing that enabled me to write the epilogue was to, was to stop looking to these alternative voices for critique or an alternative perspective. Which is not to say that these alternative perspectives don’t exist, I really think they do, but rather to kind of stop asking the oral history work to sort of solve my archival problems. Right and to say, well, no way there, there must be like, there must be a critique and as someone once pointed out to me like earlier earlier in the work, you know, it’s a tall order to ask for such a thing, because, of course, if you have been confronted by this discourse, potentially for your whole life, and you are constantly told that your reproduction is the problem, and you’re constantly going back to the medical sort of institutions, right, you’re constantly, every time you encounter a doctor or health care practitioner you’re getting the same message it really does become a taller to ask for something different, and so.

I, once I stopped that search and instead tried to listen to a little bit more of these voices, it at least enabled me to think about how the sort of the, the end product, in other words, the sort of reproductive control, right, the that’s evidenced in sort of the big demographic data about declining fertility rates in India now, that that big story doesn’t necessarily mean the winning out of the sort of ideologies of modernity and consumption that are underpinning family planning discourse, that there’s a lot of room between those two which I was, I was trying to get up.

> > Haynes: We have at least, we have a couple questions in the Q&A now from [inaudible] Bhandari. He says, thank you for this wonderful session I was wondering if you could comment on how much of these reproduction policies were an attempt by the postcolonial state to sanitize history and mythology by proposing the main the main ideal was a heterosexual couple, with emphasis on reproduction, whereas mythology show the richness of sexualities and love and sex for passion as well that’s, the first question. And, and in the second question is that goes beyond perhaps goes beyond the focus of book, but how would you explain, forced sterilization drives as by Sanjay Gandhi, were these policies and politics foreshadowing the, these brutal interventions so.

> >  Sreenivas: Yeah, thank you for, for both of those um, and the second one is maybe easier for me to answer than the first, but on the question of the forced sterilization under the Emergency, one of the arguments in the book is, is trying to, is one that all of the structures and ideas that, that were enacted in the Emergency predated the Emergency. So, although it is true that the Emergency Period was much more draconian in its sterilization policy, and it turned towards male sterilization, think that’s significant, nevertheless, all of the you know the, there was already an existence of sterilization camps prior to the Emergency. There were sort of targets and quotas prior to the Emergency, so all of the things that we associate with that already sort of pre-existed it. And so I think what I’m interested in is how the Emergency sort of rightfully you know gets sort of figured as the sort of worst forms of population control, but often leaves all of the other structures and ideological underpinnings sort of off the hook. And in fact helps to normalize, I would argue, female sterilization in its wake, which we still see in the disparate rates of male and female sterilization across South Asia.

So yeah, I think that the heterosexuality question in regard to sort of like sanitizing is super interesting, and I really want to think about that, think about that a little bit more. I don’t really have an answer. I don’t know if actually Doug does. When I’m sort of thinking about sort of earlier histories of sexology and sort of cleaning up certain myths and ideas about Brahmacharya, but I do think that one of the sort of interesting points that you know Ishita Pande makes, for example, in thinking through how certain ideas like Brahmacharya get sort of reconfigured in the space of the modern, right, and she argues about Brahmacharya becoming a life stage, which I think is and Doug talks about this as well, and I think this is sort of maybe one way to go right. I don’t think what’s happening is a sort of a total rejection of those earlier visions, but how they get sort of categorized into these modern spaces, so that they can neatly fit that way, right, so like Rama and Sita, for example, becoming sort of the ideal monogamous couple, sort of rewritten along those lines.

> > Haynes: We have a couple more more questions. Okay. Okay. I’m sorry. I’m trying to see if there’s two different questions or one. 

So one question from Sushant Kumar is, is the role, about the role of scientific authoritarianism or scientism on behalf of the pre, pre and post-independent state institutions in shaping Indian population policy. So, I guess it’s a question area that is being posed here. Could so could you talk about that, and we have another question after that.

> > Sreenivas: Sure um. Yeah, so I think, I think this probably touches on Carole’s work as well, in regard to demography, so please feel free to chime in, but I think what, I think what I was interested in was thinking through the sort of scientific certitudes around development and the way in which population figures as a variable within demographic or population discourses and as Carole also pointed out sort of some of the affective connections that are made to that vision. 

So the book, you know, doesn’t spend a huge amount of time sort of talking about sort of science, with a capital S per se, but what I am more interested in is how do people, how does that vision, right, that sort of a set of ideas about demographic transition theory, for example, as an idea that all societies are supposed to pass through this demographic transition and that it’s possible to do top-down interventions to accelerate that transition, I’m interested in how that becomes figured in public discourses as like an ideal to have attachment to, right. How do you have pride in the notion of controlling population, right? How does that have the small happy family become the site of desire that is, that acts as if that the sort of the scientific discourse sometimes acts as if that’s not happening, but I think is actually, you know, central to sort of translating these claims on the ground. And one of the things that I’ve been struck by just in sort of talking about the book with, with folks both inside and outside of sort of academic context is how often people have said to me well this, this helps me to understand, especially those who are maybe not historians, this helps me to understand like why I grew up with the ideas that I did, and I think that speaks to this question of like the kind of affective attachment to the small family that has its roots in a particular kind of science set of scientific authorities, but that that, that becomes real in people’s lives through these other set of mediations.

> > Haynes: From Muhammad Ali Imran. He says, I was wondering if the panelists could speak more on if and how post-partition, these national development discourses have diverged. I think he means between India and Pakistan in particular. Correct me if I’m wrong. How do you mediate geopolitical definitions and perhaps divergent yet co-constituent, constituted histories in understanding the sexuality and reproductive rights, especially in the case of Pakistan, India?

> > Sreenivas: Yeah, I wonder if that’s a question that Amna and I would have to answer jointly. 

The first thing that occurs to me is like well you know go to her talk later because it’s um because that’s where I’m hoping to learn more about this. So I, you know, I don’t know the answer to that question because I, it’s not something that I was able to particularly focus on. I guess, I could sort of start us off, though, in terms of thinking about where, if the earlier history of this book which focuses on the 19th century and pre-1947 are making a claim that I think is relevant for thinking about South Asia, more broadly, right, which is that the neo-Malthusian idea about population in South Asia or in colonial India takes hold well before there is any rise of population, so that any population rise is always sort of ready, always has a ready framework within which it can be situated and explained and intervened in. That I think is a history that is probably shared. I think there is a sort of a, I wonder about the questions of divergence that emerged, for example, between sort of the other set of demographic debates about West Pakistan and East Pakistan and the role of that you know in 1971. I think there’s sort of huge, huge places or moments that could push towards a kind of a divergent response.

But I don’t know, I don’t know if Amna, you know, you want to speak to that at all. Not to put you on the spot.

> > Qayyum: I will, I can just put in a comment or two because it’s, it’s a, it’s a really good question, and it’s something I’m working through throughout the project. I think one of the places where we do see divergences is, which I sort of alluded to earlier, is sort of the ethical dimensions of population control, and I think in Pakistan because the locus of sovereignty is not just you know in a straight-up relationship between sovereignty and national development, Islam also emerges as a locus of sovereignty given sort of Pakistan’s peculiar formation. Population control, then, is not while it might be about economic development, there’s also a case that is deeply normative or ethical that is being constructed in Pakistan for it, which then leads to it being sort of politicized and resisted by multiple actors. So I’ll put the ethical in there, and I’ll leave it for that, and this is something you know we can talk about more in our shared conversations later.

> > Sreenivas: Yeah and, if I can just come back on one piece of this, on the ethical question, because I know you raised it before, and I didn’t address it. I’m also thinking about what are, your questions are sort of prompting me to think what are the ethics of development itself, right, and so to not situate those as necessarily as as separate sets of discourses and questions and, and going back to my affective attachments point, right, what kind of attachments to the nation as a site of the development process, I think, become, is, this is, there’s an attempt to mobilize that set of affective attachments as opposed to, not opposed but, but in a way that I don’t see the kind of trends that you’re suggesting here about an ethical attachment that’s perhaps exists outside of or beyond the nation state in the national space. So maybe that’s just another, another point that we might want to think about.

> > Haynes: A kind of related set of questions is why did, why did the convergences remain in many cases and do, why are there, why are there continued overlaps despite the different ideologies of the, of the state? 

We do have several questions now, so from Haley Swenson. I’m just going to ask the first one here. So climate and disease seemed to be the chief concerns of the colonial, colonial proto-population control project. Can you speak to the way the precarity of the present creates or makes difficult opportunity for an alternative to population control rooted in both climate and reproductive justice?

> > Sreenivas: Yeah, thank you and hey Haley, um I think yeah, and this also relates to I think Carole’s points earlier about precarity and sort of thinking about that in relation to this, so. For those who are not constantly following the climate change in population discourse, I will just sort of put out a little background, which is that the resurgence of, you know, so, so in the 1990s, in large part due to feminist organizing and activism, the language of population control sort of fell out of favor, as probably many people know, and was sort of substituted with claims around reproductive health and health and rights. And you know Mohan Rao and others have talked about how that transition occurs at this moment of simultaneous, the demise of the Soviet Union and the rise of neoliberal capitalism globally and so that the promise of the rejection of population control is never really fulfilled.

That’s all by way of saying that, but that the ideologies sort of remain and have kind of come back now, in the context of climate change and, once again, we find that those who are at the, at the margins and who are rendered most vulnerable are also those rendered both responsible for or are seen as responsible for climate change and rendered as responsible for fixing it. You know Kalpana Wilson, who just did a brilliant talk, I went to last week sort of outlined the stakes of, of how this, how this happens in the context both of the rise of authoritarian nationalisms that in the Indian context sort of demonized Muslim women, in particular, but are very much part of sort of global development discourses that sort of use the claim of climate change to call for greater contraceptive usage by women in the Global South so.

All that by way of saying, so anyone who looks at these histories, I think will have to, I guess I’ll set back and say so there’s a question of crisis, right, that, that in the 1960s, the claim of a population bomb, right, became the crisis that enabled all kinds of you know coercive interventions in people’s bodies and especially women’s bodies. And so now again we’re confronting a crisis, this one, a real one, of global climate change and what I see as the sort of real importance of not, the failures of the population bomb were that it was neither true nor did, did the the control measures that were designed to deal with it, were they successful on their own terms, which was lowering fertility rates. And I think that’s a good and important story for us to remember, now that if you’re sort of truly to confront climate crisis, we can’t look to these sort of like false stories about who’s responsible for causing it or who’s responsible for fixing it and that, that, and there I think that addressing the question of precarity of people’s lives and livelihoods as being the crisis of climate because, as opposed to their fertility, I think, becomes the sort of central intervention that that we need to make.

> > Haynes: Elizabeth, we have time for one more question? Yes, okay for this comes from, there are several questions, there are a couple of questions, but I think we’re only going to have time for the first.

Aprajita Sarcar, as she says, I’m asking questions that come, are coming from my work. So, so thank you for the discussion. My first question is about archival traces. I have Durba Mitra’s book Indian Sex Life in mind when I ask how to work with excessive stress on the heterosexual nuclear family and the erasure of all other forms? As a second tied question, would framing the Indian nuclear family to be a product of Hindu aggrandizement limit its creative meanings?

> > Sreenivas: Yeah, those are both really good questions for which I probably don’t have answers, to be honest. But I think, I guess on the, on the first question, you know, I guess I would sort of humbly say that when I was sort of working on my book, really all I felt I could do was to sort of make that history of heterosexuality visible um as opposed to a taken-for-granted norm. But also to think about one of the, one of the struggles I had in, in writing the book right is comes with this sort of universality that you’re talking about that makes it seem as if there is no history there.

But secondly that ironically, separates that history, from all the other things that we think are associated, in this case with colonial and postcolonial development. So, I guess my attempt was to to historic size, by putting those in conversation, right, that the history of economic development has to grapple with the question of heterosexuality and not sort of leave that as a, as an unquestioned assumption, so I, again I don’t think that fully answers the question, but I that’s, that’s sort of where I was, where I was starting from.

> > Lhost: I think now, unfortunately, we are at time, so I would like to ask everyone to join me in thanking our, our author and our discussants, and Professor Haynes for leading what has been a very stimulating and a wide ranging conversation. Just thinking about where reproduction goes, it takes us in so many directions from political economy to climate change and everything else going on these days. 

So, I would like to just announce once more that our next event will be on Tuesday, December 7, and we’ll be talking about Branding Bhakti. And with that, I would like to thank Mytheli for agreeing to participate and for being a stellar author in terms of promoting and publicizing this event, in addition to putting together comments and participating. So thank you all for joining us today, and I look forward to seeing you again at the next event.

> > Sreenivas: Thank you so much, and just really quick, I know we didn’t get to all the questions, so please feel free to like shoot me an email or tag me on Twitter. I’m happy to keep talking okay.

> > Haynes: I hope you’re still able to see comments and the questions and, and in the, in the chat there before, before you depart so.

> > Lhost: I will, I’ll save the chat and I can send it to you, Mytheli.

> > Sreenivas: Oh, that would be great. Thank you.

> > Lhost: Yep, alright. Alright, thanks everyone.

> > Haynes: There were at least two questions I didn’t read. Thank you.

> > Sreenivas: Awesome, thank you. Bye.

Event Recording: Conversations on South Asia with Abhishek Kaicker

Conversations on South Asia Header
https://youtu.be/JXXUuGgaLvs

For those who weren’t able to join us for this event, here’s the recording and transcript. Enjoy!

Transcript for Conversations on South Asia with Abhishek Kaicker

>> Lhost:  All right, hello everyone and welcome to the first event in the Conversations on South Asia Series for the 2021 academic year here at Dartmouth College. I am Elizabeth Lhost. I am a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Society of Fellows at Dartmouth College and also a historian of modern South Asia, and it’s really my pleasure to be moderating this conversation today. I imagine that it will be a very stimulating and productive conversation since Abhishek has written such a wonderful and detail-filled book The King and The People, which was published with Oxford University Press in 2020.

Before we begin, I would like to acknowledge that Dartmouth College, which is the host of this series, sits on the ancestral and unceded lands of the Abenaki people, who are members of the Wabanaki Confederacy. I would also like to thank our series sponsors: the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund, the Asian Societies, Cultures and Languages program, and the Department of History for supporting this program.

And I’d especially like to thank Bruch Lehmann and Britny Town for their support with logistics. I would also like to thank our series co-organizer Professor Douglas Haynes for his tireless support and also to acknowledge the support and assistance we’ve received this year from two of our undergraduate Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund Fellows: Sri Sathvik Rayala and Bryanna Entwistle. They are working with us this year to make the series more accessible and also more successful, we hope.

We have a fantastic lineup of authors and books, who will be joining us for this series this year. Our next event in the series for those who are anxious to put it on the calendar and also to get registered will be Tuesday, November 9th with Mytheli Sreenivas’s Reproductive Politics and the Making of Modern India.

If you’d like to get a jump start, registration for that event is available at the link https://dartgo.org/conversations-sreenivas and very soon, we should have that link in the chat for all of you.

And then, in December we’ll be hosting Nicole Karapanagiotis for a discussion of her book Branding Bhakti:Krishna Consciousness and the Makeover of a Movement.

That event is Tuesday December 7 from 12:15 to 1:15pm Eastern Time, and registration for that event is available at the link https://dartgo.org/conversations-karapanagiotis.

And so we’ll have those links in the chat for you so that you can access them more easily.

Today we have Abhishek Kaicker, who is an Associate Professor at the University of California, Berkeley in the Department of History there, and he’s a historian of Persianate South Asia from roughly 1200 to 1900, with a focus on the history of the Mughal Empire. Interested in intellectual history, the history of concepts, early modern global history, religion, politics, and continuities in pre-colonial on post-colonial South Asia, Kaicker has recently published his first book, which is the subject of our discussion today, The King and the People: Sovereignty and Popular Politics in Mughal Delhi. He has also written essays concerning the Mughal Empire, including “The Little Conquest of the Red Fort,” “Petitions and Local Politics in the Late Mughal Empire: The View from Kol,” and “The Promises and Perils of Courtly Poetry: The Case of Mir ‘Abd al-Jalil Bilgrami (1660-1725) in the Late Mughal Empire.”

So, once we get started, the author will spend about 10 minutes introducing the book and its central claims to all of us, and then following his conversation, we’ll have commentary, questions, and reflections from two discussants. Tiraana Bains will be our first discussant. Tiraana is the Modern Intellectual History Postdoctoral Fellow in Dartmouth’s Department of History. She is a historian of South Asia, Britain, and the British Empire, and her research focuses on questions of empire, statecraft, labor, and political economy as it concerns both South Asians and the British. Her recent publications include “Thinking the Empire Whole” and “Reconnecting the Global British Empire: Response to Critics.” She is currently working on her book Instituting Empire: The Contested Makings of a British Imperial State in South Asia, 1750-1800, which looks at the growth of British imperialism in and around the Indian Ocean basin.

Our second discussant then will be Fariba Zarinebaf, who is a Professor of History at the University of California, Riverside. She primarily researches the Middle East, particularly the social and urban history of the Ottoman Empire and Iran from the early modern to modern periods.

Professor Zarinebaf [has] published several books, including Mediterranean Encounters: Trade and Pluralism in Early Modern Galata and Women on the Margins: Gender, Charity, and Justice in the Early Modern Middle East. Her Crime and Punishment in Istanbul, 1700-1800 book filled a crucial gap in Ottoman Studies and is directly connected, I think, in part, to the discussion of urban politics and the the rise of cities in this time period that [we] will be talking about with Abhishek’s book today. She has also published numerous articles, including “Capitulations and the Rise of an Ottoman Bourgeoisie: A Command Economy in Transition?” and “Policing Morality: Crossing Gender and Communal Boundaries in an Age of Political Crisis and Religious Controversy in Seventeenth-Century Istanbul.” So, once the three panelists have shared their comments, we will then open the floor to questions from the audience.

You should have access to the Q&A feature at the bottom of the webinar, and we will do our best to make sure the author and the commentators have a chance to answer your questions. And now, without further delay, please welcome Professor Kaicker.

>> Kaicker: So, shall I begin? Great well, thank you so much Elizabeth for the invitation to virtually visit Dartmouth. I wish it were in-person and am very sorry not to be in a beautiful campus in the fall. And thank you to Fariba and Tiraana for your responses that I’m eager to hear, much more eager to hear than my own very soon scattered comments. And, just a quick welcome to all of the people who are attending today. I see many familiar names, ranging from the entirety of my academic career from college, from the very beginning of college, to the world of Twitter. So I’m very glad that you’re all here, and I hope that what follows will be stimulating discussion, so let me just say a few words about this book, which began, I think, as all first books do as really an undergraduate question or a question that you know began to appear to me at the beginning of graduate school, which was simply this you know, can there be a history of ordinary people in the Mughal Empire. Is this something that is possible? Where are the people in the history of the Mughal Empire?

And, in some ways, of course, this is you know a self evident question that has been answered extensively in the Marxist historiography of South Asia. So I would you know only like to remind you of the just immensely important work of historians, such as Irfan Habib, who has shaped our fields completely in talking about the mass of the population of South Asia, the peasantry and their importance and that history in the Mughal period. And yet it always seemed to me that there was something crucial missing from the treatment of the agrarian landscape of South Asia. Surely it is true, of course, the South Asia, then, and even to some extent now it’s predominantly an agricultural region. Yet at the same time, we were always told the cities, such as Delhi and Lahore and Agra, were among the largest metropolises in the world. So what was the nature of urban experience and the nature of urban politics in these places in the 17th and 18th centuries? And this is not merely an idol question simply because of the fact that, on the one hand, over the last 20 or 30 years there’s been an increasing emphasis in the history of a global and connected and in modernity in which cities have appeared as absolutely central nodes of the kind of political transformations, preceding the kind of political transformation, so by the end of the 18th century would constitute the structure of the modern world as we know it. I mean the two great revolutions, and particularly the aura or the shadow of the French Revolution hangs temporarily in both directions across from 1789, and it’s something for all of us to grapple with, those of us who are interested in questions of modernity and politics in other parts of the world.

So this this question, you know, lay at the heart of my inquiry, and I was inspired, of course, by the work of professors, Zarinebaf, for instance, you know who could answer and address these questions in very direct ways and very impressively by recourse to a large extent powerful archives. And when I looked through, for instance, Fariba’s bibliography, I could only stare with envy at these large number of administrative records of the city of Istanbul of the kind that simply don’t exist for very particular historical reasons for Delhi and presumably for other places in South Asia too.

So, one of the main problems was that there was no archive as such to answer the question and that I had to constitute my archives. And when I started constituting the archive, when I turned to the sources that were available to me, I was confronted with an immediate problem, because these were literary sources. And they did not necessarily address the questions that I was interested in. They were written almost invariably by elites, and for these elites, there was an absolute and implacable condescension and dislike for what they referred to as the [inaudible] bazaar right, “the people of the market and the street.” And so the question was basically an interpretive question. In what ways and how could I possibly use these kinds of sources to talk about urban politics, about people’s lives in the city? When I started reading these sources, I discovered also the uncomfortable fact that they were absolutely filled with instances of political violence, but political violence that was expressed almost always in a religiosity and so what looks like extreme religious bigotry and warfare litters the pages of accounts of urban life in the 17th and 18th century. And this is something of which I think historians have long been aware in South Asia, and it’s something that makes them uncomfortable, but the cause of the discomfort, really is the present political circumstances of South Asia, not the historical realities themselves right. And so again, you know, turning to the historiography of my former colleague [Dwinelle?] Hall, Natalie Zemon Davis and her just absolutely brilliant essays from the 1970s made it possible for me to start thinking more seriously about the kinds of religious violence I was seeing in these pages and to begin to recognize that this was in fact not merely religious violence, but it was political violence and as I did this, the very question of what is the religious, and what is the political became increasingly confounded for me.

A second question that became immediately apparent to me was that a lot of this violence, when it is expressed in archival sources, addresses the figure of the king and Delhi, of course, is a peculiar city because the king lives in the city of Delhi, but it’s never done it became clear to me that there was a kind of organic tie-up in elite conceptions, but perhaps also to some extent in popular life, between the figure of the king and the figure of the people. And the people here are, of course, a literary artifact in our texts that I think they also correspond to a reality that I hope that I’ve been able to uncover to some degree in this work. And one way, of course, to get at the reality of these literary artifacts was to focus on the space of the city where even literary artifacts begin to acquire a kind of highly concretized reality in spatial context. So thinking about space became a way to ground the literary in particular kind of things.

And, in looking at the figure of the King, I realized that the question that created the basis for the working and the emergence of the people as political subjects was the act of sovereignty itself, the performance of sovereignty. And again, I think, in South Asia, we have long suffered from a poor historiography on questions of sovereignty, and so we use the word very, very loosely. I’m guilty of it myself, and we have not thought sufficiently about what it means to talk about sovereignty when we talk about politics, and this is of course a larger problem of the question of etic and emic concepts as they come from the historiography of Europe to the rest of the world and are applied here and Mughal historians have, and I think again I include myself in this criticism you know, particularly, particularly careless in the importation of concepts from European historiography to South Asia. But it occurred to me that thinking more seriously about sovereignty in the case of the Mughal Empire, in its own terms, raises important problems.

And one of the problems was that there is no such physical object as sovereignty, rather, there is a discourse. There were ways in which Mughal authors talk about the emergence of the constitution of political power, and the people were always part of this vision in some way. What’s interesting about the 17th and 18th centuries, is the economic transformations of the Mughal empire mainly the pouring in of new world silver created new material conditions in which assertive urbanites could actually begin to address the king. And as a discourse of sovereignty shifted, particularly in the 17th, in the second half of the 17th century, towards a kind of Islamic formal legalism which again has many parallels in the Ottoman empire the people began to assert themselves in new and complicated ways, so you know the book then traces the emergence of the arc of these people into political subjects [inaudible] and begins and ends with two major acts of political violence. That, I think, outline and lay out the possibility broadly of the historical journey of a populace into a people right, of a group of people, of, uh, you know the masses as such into political actors. In a world in which there was no formal conception of that possibility and I think this is something that speaks more broadly to questions or historiography in Asia, in Europe, and elsewhere, so I’ll stop here.

>> Bains: Alright, so I’ll go ahead, then and I’ll begin by quickly thanking Elizabeth and Douglas and the student assistants for helping put this together, and, of course, Professors Kaicker and Zarinebaf for agreeing to participate in this conversation. So I will begin my speaking briefly about where we can locate this important new book The King and the People in historiography of the Mughal Empire, but also South Asia, more generally, and then I’ll pose a few questions, of course Abhishek you should feel free to pick up on whatever you might find interesting and for those of you who haven’t had a chance to read the book yet, some of these questions might point in the direction of the range of themes that are discussed so as many of you will be familiar. In recent years, in the past decade there’s been a wealth of new literature on Mughal South Asia and the Mughal empire. And really innovative efforts to try and expand the ways in which we usually conceptualize Mughal political authority. These include works by Munis Faruqui, who has really thought through the ways in which we can think beyond the person of the Mughal Emperor himself and think about princely households as important political institutions, and particularly the role to play outside imperial capital, especially when they’re waging succession battles, wars of succession, across various Mughal provinces. 

Equally, Supriya Gandhi’s work, her recent book has focused on the figure of Dara Shikoh and how a princely figure who will never end up becoming Emperor, how he participates in Mughal intellectual and cultural life. Others such as Audrey Truschke and Rajeev Kinra can have turned to more middling figures, including that of say a Hindu munshi or a scribe Chandar Bhan Brahman, who, nevertheless, are able to participate in the project of Persianate literary sophistication as well as a projection of Mughal imperium. And in many ways The King and the People is also building on this attention to cultural and intellectual history to this attention to literary texture and how Persian poetry and other forms of discourse are circulating, both in the Mughal court but also outside. That being said what this book is doing is also fundamentally different, which is rethinking Mughal state formation by really taking popular politics and everyday conversation seriously.

One could say that the traditional or more conventional way of doing Mughal history would be to really see the way the Mughal states sees people and the way the Mughal state envisions the countryside. The introductory chapter in The King and the People is titled “Seeing the People.” But this book is really going beyond just seeing the people. It is also attempting to demonstrate how the people, how Mughal subjects themselves might have conceptualized and challenged or defended the Mughal state so really how is it that people see the state how is it that the denizens of Delhi imagine the figure of the Mughal Emperor and the connection with their own lives and livelihoods between imperial authority and themselves.

So what you, and of course I guess the reason why it hasn’t been done is really due to the limitations of the archive, and as Abhishek has just outlined for us what he really had to do was reconstitute a fragmentary archive. Those of you who are familiar with Nandini Chatterjee’s recent work Negotiating Mughal Law, you will see in that particular piece of scholarship another model for how we might try to bring together a Mughal archive to think through the question of agrarian economy and zamindari landholding in a space such as Malwa. What Professor Kaicker has done is really read official chronicles against the grain, drop on fleeting bits of poetry and even look at materials such as imperial newsletters or akhbarat that have survived in unlikely places such as Sitamau in Madhya Pradesh and so really it’s an act of recovery bringing all this material together, and if you haven’t read the book yet one of the bits that I enjoyed the most is this book’s attention to 18th century jokes and the art of telling a joke across multiple languages, one that operates across Persian and Hindi which might seem very crass but, in fact, contains a kernel of political critique at its heart. In doing all of this, Professor Kaicker is also, in many ways, addressing some of the biggest, weightiest questions at the heart of South Asian historiography. For a long time historians of the subaltern studies collective have asked the question of what is the place of the people, how can ordinary people be constituted as historical subjects.

In his classical essay, “Prose of Counterinsurgency,” Ranajit Guha has discussed the ways in which we can take popular resistance seriously and not simply treated as mindless action akin to a natural disaster and the King and the People is very much engaging with that. There’s also engaging with a very difficult and I suppose inevitable question of imperial transition. How do we explain Mughal decline and the establishment of British colonialism in the subcontinent? And Professor Kaicker is responding to this by really arguing that we need to turn the pre-1757 moment to the pre-Battle of Plassey moment and take seriously the so-called lesser Mughals who are often consigned to a single chapter in South Asian textbooks, though I’m not sure what is being taught in India anymore. And again what this book is really doing is arguing for taking seriously this rich Persian archive as well as archive of vernacular languages which, even for the scattered nevertheless gives us a great wealth of detail about how ordinary people might conceptualize questions of political authority.

So I’ll now turn to some of the questions that I have and I guess my first major question is really the question of geography and region. This book for obvious reasons, as Abhishek has explained, focuses on Delhi. It is the imperial capital, it is where the emperor himself is located. And we do get brief snippets, of course, of what’s happening in Lahore, Surat as well as Ahmedabad, but I’m curious about how popular politics is in those cities and the sort of second cities of the empire, or even smaller, more provincial towns might be unfolding in a slightly different way, due to the absence of the emperor. And the book makes the case that, outside of Delhi, much of the nobility had already managed to create a firmer hold in some of these other places and other regions of the empire, so how is it that this is playing out in different places, is there a slightly different vocabulary that gets deployed outside of Delhi in other regions and equally in terms of thinking about the peasantry in the countryside, how do conflicts in a space, such as Delhi, inflict those in rural spaces and vice versa? Um my second question really speaks to the theme of commerce and economic transformation in the early modern world at large, but in Delhi and South Asia in particular, especially since intensifying commerce is really at the heart of the causal story in this book. It is how, it is how you, explain why the population of Delhi, when Mughal subjects are becoming more assertive, you note the consumption of new commodities, such as coffee, as well as how the consumption of such commodities is creating new spaces for sociability as well as political critique. Commercial prosperity is clearly producing new tensions and ideas. Poetry itself has become a commodity that has a market value during this time period.

In some ways, it seems the Delhi in the 1720s is quite like London in the 1720s, but what I was hoping for was perhaps more discussion of how Mughal subjects and officials during the period are managing and reflecting on commercial transformation and increased commercial vitality. What are the financial mechanisms and innovations that are coming into being at this time of the new relationships of credit and debt? And really what are some of the new economic ideas that are emerging, and how are these economic ideas or economic ideologies reframing social relations, creating new solidarities based on say, trading networks, even creating new alliances across elite and non-elite groups? Are there forms of association of life that diverged from more traditional patterns of communal belonging and kinship? And again, I suppose, on the team of commerce and economic transformation, I think this book can also serve as an excellent resource to rethink the history of labor, especially in urban settings. This book is already providing great detail about various professional communities, caste groups as they operate in Delhi, and the labor that they provide to keep the city running. And, in most of the instances and case studies discussed in the book, many of these communities, such as the shoemakers, come together to invoke the justice of the king and make demands based on particular violations in particular moments, but I’d be curious if there’s a broader discourse about laboring conditions about economic change. Even concerns about their own place in Delhi’s economy and the wider economy of Hindustan and the Mughal empire. And I’m sure the sources don’t really lend themselves to this, but I’m curious if you could excavate more of this or pick out some of these things. And finally, I’ll close with a question of selfhood and self-fashioning.

There’s a rich literature on earlier periods on how ideas of gender and imperial masculinity and femininity are constructed say during the reign of Akbar, for instance, and I’m curious how changing political realities and socioeconomic relations in the late 17th and early 18th century are producing similar changes. And the book already provides very rich insights into how non-elite women are participating in political life, but I’m curious about how discourse around gender might be shifting if at all. And finally, especially given all the recent work on conceptions of the Persianate, I’d be curious if you see these non-elite actors as participating in the same kind of Persianate world that elite bureaucrats participate in as they move across Central Asia, Iran and Hindustan.

Or are these non-elite actors participating in a very different version of the Persianate world or do you think the category of Persianate or Persianate itself I mean, of course, invoking Mana Kia’s recent work here might not apply in quite the same way. So I’ll stop there, and I look forward to the discussion after but many thanks. This is, of course, an excellent book, and I’m really delighted to have had the opportunity to engage with it.

>> Zarinebaf: Okay, thank you so much for all those wonderful comments, so I’m going to provide my own feedback from a very different perspective, you know, one that is outside Mughal India. But I first wanted to thank Dr. Elizabeth Lhost and Dartmouth for inviting me to take part in this very interesting book workshop and conversation and offer my own feedback as a non-specialist and a historian of Ottoman and Safavid urban life. The book contributes in an important manner to the city of Delhi and its social transformation in the 18th century.

It begins with the occupation of Nadir Shah of Iran, his plunder of Delhi and the brutal treatment of the populace, causing a major rebellion in 1739. He used a systematic event to weave together the changing political dynamics and notions of legitimacy and justice to shed light on the relationship between the ruling class and the populace of Delhi. He argues that this period witnessed frequent reshuffling of the power structure. The long 17th century that is sometimes quite violently at the hands of a more assertive nobility or a faction within it, as well as the populace at large. He reads chronicles against the grain and avoids explanations solely based on social and economic factors, I think in part as he himself admitted due to the [inaudible] of archival material for this period, but I may be wrong. Let me now shift to to my own specialty as a historian of early modern Safavid and Ottoman Empires and see whether we can see some connections.

The 18th century has long been the black hole of Ottoman and Safavid studies and viewed as the height of Ottoman decline and Safavid collapse. Marshall Hodgson in his, in the third volume of his Ventures of Islam referred to this era, as the period of deluge, decline and the rise of the West, which he observed in these in all these three gunpowder empires. As he noted, and I agree with him in general, in all the three gunpowder empires, he observed a growing factionalism within the court circles dominated by grand wazirs, the haram and the palace guards. This was also an age of pleasure and peace after long wars and territorial losses, particularly for the Ottoman Empire in the late 17th century. In Istanbul, Sultan Ahmed III, who reigned between 1703 and 1730, and his ground wazir Nevşehirli Ibrahim Pasha loved organizing tulip festivals in their newly built waterfront mansions called sada bad and it’s really interesting that all these names, you know, are very familiar for these spaces. In Isfahan, Shah Sultan Husayn built the Farahabad suburb for his pleasure and preferred the company of women and the cup to the working to working with his soldiers and bureaucrats.

I think similar things were going on in Delhi. Though these could simply be gossip and gripe by chronicles, in all three empires, we also observe the growing power of the nobility, what Abhishek calls an assertive nobility, the pasha and ulema households, who enriched themselves at the expense of peasants and artisans and took advantage of the growing weakness of the central government. According to many observers, foreign and local, corruption was rampant in both empires. We also witness the rise of puritanical, some would call fundamentalist, Islamic movements, led by preachers who called for the persecution of minorities, Jews and Christians, Shiites and Sunnis. And Sufi tariqas, imposing sumptuary laws on women and minorities and ordering the closing of taverns and coffee houses. This was an age of social, economic, cultural and religious prices characterized by climate change, famine inflation, unemployment, as well as urban upheavals. But new research in the Ottoman archives has shown that this was also a period of urban growth, expansion of trade, building activity by the ruling elites, migration, and the settlement of Europeans in port cities. The size of the three capitals, Isfahan, Istanbul, Isfahan, and Delhi exceeded 500,000, and our cities expanded beyond the walls into new suburbs. However, this brief age of pleasure and peace in Isfahan and Istanbul was violently disrupted by the Afghan invasion of Iran in 1722.

The rough treatment of Sunni tribes by the Safavid Georgian governor of Kandahar was the trigger for the Afghan plunder of Isfahan. The weakness of the court to contain further uprisings worsened the crisis. The Afghan invasion of Iran, the brutal takeover of Isfahan after a long siege, the bloodbath that followed in the palace and the city brought about the dramatic collapse of the Safavid Dynasty and the permanent decline of Isfahan from a major Islamic imperial capital to a provincial town in 1722. The Ottoman armies subsequently took the entire Western Iran while Peter the Great of Russia took part of the Caucasian provinces and the silk growing regions along the Caspian Sea. Now, this is going to be the subject of my next book. The triple division of Iran in 1725 led to the rise of Nadir Shah from a very humble background to power in Khorasan. His coronation and long campaigns against the Ottoman Empire, the Afghans, and Mughal India to restore the Persian Empire. Nadir’s defeat of Ottoman troops in Tabriz and the Ottoman withdrawal from Western Iran in 1730 triggered the most violent uprising: the Patrona Halil rebellion in Istanbul led by disgruntled janissaries, the city’s artisans, Albanian migrants and workers, and some Ulema households, so the preachers also played a key role in this event. This rebellion led to the takeover of the city by the rebels for several months. It was almost like the French Revolution. The destruction of all the tulip parks and mansions and the mistreatment of European traders. It also ended the reign of Sultan Ahmed the Third and his favorite grand wazir and son-in-law, who was cut to pieces and murdered and dragged through the streets of Istanbul. The Tulip Age had come to a violent end in Istanbul, eight years after the plunder of Isfahan by the Afghans in 1722. The fate of the Ottoman capital in 1730 at the hands of Albanian rebels was not too dissimilar from the plunder of Safavid Isfahan by Afghan rebels in 1722. You might also argue that Delhi also experienced a similar fate in 1739 and later in 1750s at the hands of Afghans and somewhere between the Safavid and Ottoman examples.

I think Abhishek’s opening chapter sets the stage to connect the rebellions of 1739 in Delhi to events in Isfahan and Istanbul, and I might even say in Tabriz in 1722 and 1730. At the same time, I also believe that to better understand all these developments, it might be helpful to integrate the study of imperial borderlands into that of the rest of our empires. For example, you know if you were to focus on events in the Afghan borderland, you know between these two empires or in Azerbaijan, for that matter, and what was going on as, as you know, these two empires, the Safavids and the Mughals, were trying to assert their control over these regions, how would we you know, otherwise evaluate you know what was going on in Delhi, in Istanbul and in Isfahan?

So while you know I completely agree with Abhishek that you know historiography of Mughal India and, for that matter, Safavid Iran and Ottoman Empire, you know, have not paid much attention to the role of the people, if he expanded the notion of the people right to peasants, you know as Tiraana brought up, to traders, as well as you know, to these tribes, you know who inhabited the edges of their empires, to the provinces, you know further further away. Might we also reconsider you know the notion of legitimacy, the notion of justice that obviously you know the rebels, you know in Kandahar or Herat, you know were trying to also address to these rulers and you know we’re kind of you know exhausted so so, in other words, you know what I’m really calling for is you know to kind of expand the scope scope of the subaltern right, you know the kind of center-periphery dynamic and also look at you know this kind of ground up ground up historiography maybe from the peripheries to the center rather than just focusing on our cities so kind of moving beyond you know urban urban centers and imperial capitals to other cities to other towns, to the peripheries of the empire. So I’m going to stop there, and I look forward to your comments.

>> Lhost: Thank you all for those comments. I think I will give Abhishek a couple of minutes to respond to any of the comments or questions that were presented to him before we move to questions from the audience. So if you have any questions, please remember to put them in the Q and A. We’ll start to sort and share them as we go along, but Abishek would you like to respond?  

>> Kaicker: Yeah, I’m sorry that my internet connection is a little bit unstable, so I may have missed some aspects of the questions, but I hope that we can have a broader conversation and resume these things because I think that the points that both Fariba and Tiraana have raised were really interesting.

So you know, on Tirana, first, I think what you’ve really done is outline an entire course of research for the 18th century in South Asia, and I hope that you know someone will undertake it, maybe even you. But I think that you know because I, these are questions that were absolutely central and deeply interesting. So you know, to take the question, for instance, of the changing economic understanding of the period among actors is something that I would love to know more about, and I don’t know very much about it. It was possible, for instance, to read the [inaudible] poetry of the city, to be able to track the rise of certain kinds of groups and then you know the discomfort caused by the rising elites of the period.

But, of course, the question of the actual administration and management of the trade that fuels the empire is a much trickier affair, and I think it’s something that will probably require focus on the locality outside the city, particularly Bengal, particularly connection between Delhi elites, families of Delhi elites, and Bengali traders. This is, some of my work is going in this direction now, but I’d also like to sort of mention the upcoming work of young scholars, that is, Sudev Sheth who is thinking very seriously now about economic transformations and new systems of thinking that trade. And again, you know there’s much that we can learn from the Ottoman historiography so, for instance, the very idea of ijara, you know, as a potentially you know, a powerful or important financial instrument, rather than merely a form of the destruction rent forming, that is, you know merely a form of agricultural destruction, you know, is sort of staple of the Ottoman historiography for several decades now, but has yet to be seriously taken up, except for people like Shalib. So I think that there’s you know very much to do on that score. There’s, of course, the question of, a very important question of potential changes in the way that gender itself might operate in these urban spaces, and I think again that there’s very much to be said about that, but that will require a return to a linguistically challenging and interesting archive.

My only, you know, my only response to I think these, you know, phenomenal points, I think, the only, the only response that I can offer to one key point that you make Tirana, is the question of you know other cities and other places. So it’s certainly true that I think other places have other particular dynamics, right. Lahore I think is a very interesting city and it’s an interesting city because it’s clearly has a very large and deep theological infrastructure and communities of ordinary people who are deeply engaged with Islamic piety from the early 17th century onwards, if not even earlier. So it’s true that I think that looking at different cities will lead to different portraits, but I think that what this book revealed for me was the possibility of making an argument about a general form of politics in pre-modern South Asia, which I think is important, and I think is actually very important because it remains to the present. And that’s mainly to say that the divide between the religious and political in South Asia is a colonial divide, and it’s a move to depoliticize the workings of ordinary politics in the heartland of the Mughal empire, which were always very threatening to the emergence of the nation’s colonial state. And this again is a book project that I’m on. But I can, I think, I can make the case that thinking seriously about the question of the categories of what is religious and what is political in South Asia will remind us that there is no neat line between those two categories in South Asia. And there isn’t a neat line today right, and so you could make the case of the colonial state itself and the attempted depoliticization of the colonial state, and then the attempted liberal political order of the postcolonial states of South Asia, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh have never actually managed to subsume the complex relationship between questions of the divine, access to the divine, and the workings of politics in the present, right. But my plea would be that in these sorts of situations which think of Islam in general as not just a religion but also a language of politics, a way of doing urban politics, and I think this insight potentially holds across the region.

And I would love to see how it is engaged in other places. And you know, to Fariba, you know, thank you so much for sort of laying out this broader context, which was you know, always in the back of my mind. You know you, you pointed out some of the limitations, I think, of like working in a purely urban space, and I think here part of the question for me was simply being able to make a kind of argument which required a certain amount of slave hands. It’s very convenient for me that the city of Delhi was built by the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan in his own name. And therefore, the city itself represents in core Mughal ideology, to which its urban subjects can respond. This is obviously not true of Istanbul in the same way, so here was an act of convenience for me.

But I think you’re absolutely right, and I think that much greater attention and engagement with trying to integrate the city into the countryside around it is obviously something to be decided right. So, for instance, it was recently pointed out to me by one of my distinguished colleagues that the river in Delhi is more or less absent from my work. And that’s a very major oversight. I can only plead a certain imposition in an arbitrary imposition of the limited framework as a way of trying to get a grip around archival sources that, as you know, are complex, and we should leave it at that. And you know I’m afraid Fariba that I also missed some of your last comments, because of my poor Internet connection. So if you could remind me, we could continue the conversation.

>> Zarinebaf: Yeah, well, um yes, first of all, I also wanted to kind of point out how integrated in the 18th century these three empires were through . . .

>> Kaicker: Yes.

>> Zarinebaf: precisely through, you know, trade, especially the Safavid and the Mughal empires empires. And I must say that, you know, on our side, there’s absolutely no interest in what’s going on in the Ottoman Empire and Mughal Empire, in both empires. I’m probably the only historian who works on Ottoman-Safavid connectivity. So the 18th century is a period when you know not only trade with the West, you know where the Ottomans, you know, and the Safavids, but also with the East. So these capitals are integrated they are connected. They’re also connected through their borderlands, and I think we need to really pay attention to imperial borderlands and contest them. Contestations over these borderlands, what’s going on in in in the Afghan borderland, I think is crucial in the 18th century, you know, as Isfahan is trying to assert its control and as Delhi is trying to do the same thing.

And then you have this big rebellion that affects Delhi and Isfahan, and it leads to the fall of them. The Safavids, right, and then the Ottomans don’t want the Afghans to get to their borderlands. You know, so they move into Western Iran to avoid having to deal with the Afghans. Right, so I think you know, this is really the wider question is, is really crucial to sort of try to figure out what is going on at this moment, which I think you paint you know that with so much you know kind of dynamism and, and it’s wonderful that you open your book with this chapter. I think it’s really great, and you ended with with another Afghan you know sort of invasion of Delhi, right, in 1759. So why the Afghans, what’s going on in that borderland, what’s going on between Isfahan and Delhi, so those were you know, the latter part of my comments.

>> Kaicker: Right and again, you know, there are wonderful young scholars, who are now working extensively on the history of the Afghans from the you know 15th to the 19th century, so I’m really delighted that this is a vibrant and major historiographical push in our field. It’s really a wonderful move, but I think you know, I think that the destabilization occasions by Afghanistan in the middle of the first third of the 18th century leads to the collapse of the Safavids and the Mughal empires. And I think you know it can be argued that the Afghans are actually more important in disrupting the Mughal Empire than the British are in 1757, right. And so I think that the you know that that the, the you know the world, I mean, in a sense, we have to come to terms with the world historical importance of Afghanistan not just in the 21st century. And you know there’s a reason that I think that we keep returning to it on our map as we teach, absolutely.

>> Lhost: Abhishek, we have a couple of questions that have come in. First, Pamela Price asks whether you can elaborate on your concept of sovereignty that you develop in the course of the book or perhaps elaborate the idea of the discourses of sovereignty. And then, if you would like to, David Lelyveld is also wondering whether you could talk a little bit about what carries over into the British period, particularly with reference to the 1857 Rebellion and British claims to imperial sovereignty in South Asia after that.

>> Kaicker: So I think that you know my claim about sovereignty is this: you know, I think that in South Asia, we have tended to use the word sovereignty merely as a stand-in for kingship, and we have a sort of anthropological sense of this stand-in for kingship that seems to simply suggest that everyone is playing at the games of kingship. And it’s interesting to sort of you know, read these claims against the very thick literature, and I’m thinking of people like Richard [inaudible] my colleague and Berkeley and others, you know, who really make the case that the ideal of sovereignty is something that is historically invented in the late 16th century for particular purposes. It is a claim. It is a claim that is routinely contested. This invented idea suggests that there’s some emanating force that actually permits and allows the constitution of politics and government as such, and it’s not there for merely a standing for kingship. So much more interested in the question of you know what is the thing that makes it possible for a Mughal emperor to make a world historical claim. And here the main actor would not be the emperor himself, but the ideologues/intellectuals at his court that marshalled diverse, intellectual, cultural, religious and social resources to create a language in a way of talking about the proper and orderly disposition of power and centering it at the Mughal court in opposition to other locales and places, right.

Now this language becomes a widespread language. So, obviously, it becomes very important at the court of Akbar in the 16th century, but it is enunciated repeatedly and changed productively over the 17th century in very dramatic ways. And so Shah Jahan’s discourse of sovereignty, I make the case, his greatest enunciation in that discourse is, in fact, the creation of a city in his own name, and I think I can show that the urban fabric of the city directly represents the ideological values that are central to the empire, because it is a new construction. But the discourse changes with the coming of his son Aurangzeb to the throne, and here it requires a much more legalistic and Islamic tint. And that is also productive for the emergence of the practice of popular politics, so there’s a kind of dynamic relationship between these expressions and claims to power and the proper ordering of the world that are never rejected by the people to whom they are applied, right. And I think that is important to remember that there is, you know, the story of sovereignty and popular politics is not a story of only resistance. It is also a story of acquiescence and engagement, and in that sense, it is more than merely resistance in the market sense. It is politics as such, right, And, therefore, the people of the city because precisely of their engagement with the intellectual questions at the heart of sovereignty are not people. They are, in fact, political. They are in politics. So that’s the that’s the that’s the question of sovereignty. And what was the second question, Elizabeth could you please remind me?

>> Lhost: Yes, the second question has to do is what carries over when the British start to make claims or start to take over claims to imperial sovereignty—or to being the sovereign—in the subcontinent, whether they adopt some of the same language or same terms or same ideologies and how it might be different, and maybe even you could talk about what carries over, if there’s anything that carries over, into the post independence period.

>> Kaicker: Right, well, I mean, I, you know, I, David obviously knows much more about this than I do, and I’ve learned so much from his work over the years, but it’s very, very clear that, for instance, you know, if you read the Urdu account or the Persian accounts of the arrival of the mutineers in Delhi, from those perspectives, it looks like an 18th century urban riot, right, where the mutineers arrived, and the first thing they do is approach the king, and they say we demand justice, and our justice is that we would like to extricate all of the Europeans. Why must they be extricated? Because they are damaging religion, right. Because they’re attacking the [inudible]. So this is a very classic enunciation in a very familiar language. Sorry. Am I audible? Am I coming through?

Okay, yeah.

>> Lhost: Yes, the sound is coming through.

>> Kaicker: Okay, I think, I may have some internet issues.

Okay, then. I think that you know, there is also a sort of longer, deeper history that carries through to the 20th century, and I can’t you know, obviously, it’s not possible to have a fuller discussion of that at this moment, but I do want to say, for instance, you know the profound importance of the satirical poem in South Asia as a means of doing politics, as a means of political communication is something that does not end in the 18th century. And so you know, for those of us in South Asia who you know will pick up a phone and open WhatsApp and go to a WhatsApp group and are immediately inundated by a stream of political poetry, doggerel, and satire should suggest that there is, in fact, a deeply historical genealogy to the ways in which actual political communication and work happens in the region, and that is a historical genealogy that is infected by technology, obviously, but clearly has much richer and deeper histories, than the political order of the so-called, you know, liberal democratic state, of which the vineyards anyway fading fast in the present and I think of both Pakistan and India in this case.

>> Lhost: Thanks, Abhishek. We have a question from Taha Rauf who asks how you would describe the position of the khanqahs in the language of politics. Would you consider these institutions part of decentralized nodes of power that are either cooperating or competing with a more centralized political central, center—Mughal or otherwise or is there some sort of dichotomy? Where do they fit into this discourse? And the person posing the question says it is framed in reference to Richard Eaton’s work on Bengal.

>> Kaicker: Right, thank you. I’m just going to turn my video off to see if I can improve my sound and video quality. This is a good question. I don’t really know. I have an article coming out on religious institutions in Delhi in the 18th century, in the 17th and 18th century in the near future, where I make the case that the fortunes of commercialization which sweep the city also have a transformative impact on religious practice and religious institutions in the period. You know, I think much more can be said about the place of the khanqahs, but it’s very clear that there are different kinds of khanqahs, there are different kinds of political actors and orders. So you have very elite Sufi lineages in the 18th century, you know the Chishtis in Delhi, for instance, who have a very particular sets of religious practices. And then it seems that there are other Sufi lineages that speak much more directly to warrior groups and low lying urban groups, such as the Naqshbandis that I think in are particularly important important in Delhi in this regard, and it’s not an accident that Naqshbandi [inaudible] seem to be particularly associated with political uprisings in the late 17th and particularly the early 18th century in Delhi and Lahore. And again, of course, there is a direct connection, I think, to the Ottoman and Safavid empires, particularly the Ottoman Empire. I’ve long wondered about whether it might be possible to trace more tightly relations of political ideas moving between these spaces. It occurs to me, of course, that you know if there were rebels in Delhi in 1729 or 31 who were imagining new forms of doing politics altogether the ideas that came to them that they would have picked up in the [inaudible] in Delhi would have been from been from the Naqshbandi soldiers and travelers who came from Istanbul and could talk about the 1703 Uprising. So, so it occurs to me that there is a landscape of interconnection there, but I think that is yet to be revealed.

>> Lhost: Thanks. We have just a couple of minutes left so I’m going to try to group two of the questions that have come in, and the first one raises a question about archives and the way that in in historiography on South Asia, we tend to talk about the absence of the archive, the loss of the archive, and this person asks, in some ways, how, how your work grapples with this, but also how, as historians, do we transgress the idea that Anjali Arondekar has put forth, that we’re kind of obsessed with the epistemological preoccupation of the loss and the impoverishment of the archive—so, allowing what we don’t find in the archives to drive some of the questions that we ask—to drive the way that we talk about the history. How do we sort of square that with with what you’ve done in your work, maybe finding alternative archives or creating other archives or looking to sources that have been in plain sight for a while and just thinking about them in other ways?

And then, second, Sana Haroon asks whether you could say more about the non-elite actors who come through some of your reading of the sources. Who are they? How do they, how do they come to engage with the state? How do you engage with them in your work? And then who, who still remains hidden, even when we’re doing this sort of alternative reading or looking at sources and other ways, who, who still escapes some of the archival traces or the written, the written traces?

>> Kaicker:  So, I mean to just touch on Sana Haroon’s question, you know, the last chapter or the second to last chapter of my book, really is a detailed exploration of an uprising of shoemakers, Muslim shoemakers, in the city of Delhi. And I think you know, in some ways, you know, it is possible under certain very limited conditions to be able to talk about very particular low lying actors in the urban space in the city. But that is only under very particular conditions. The only time when shoemakers will enter the pages of Persian prose, right, the beautiful pages of Persian prose is when they do something so reprehensible that elites are forced to write about them against their will, right, because everybody knows that you don’t sully the beautiful page of language with mention of unmentionable people, right. So in a sense that becomes an opportunity to actually think about the profoundly transgressive nature of low level actors and their political power, but it only becomes possible under very limited conditions.

The question of the loss of the archive . . . it’s certainly true, you know there’s no denying the fact that the Mughal archive does not exist in the way that it was constituted, right. I’ve been you know examining again with wonder this massive collection of the, you know, thousands of recently published pages on a single library catalog from the Topkapi Palace in the 16th century.

We are very far from being able to do that.

It’s also the case, I think, that some of the archives of the city of Delhi were destroyed again by Afghan invasions but also all the other actors who were doing things in that period, and I think obviously colonial rule has much more to do with this than we like to think.

At the same time, it seems to me that you know, the question of the loss of the archives as a sort of emotional response for South Asians, and for South Asian scholars and not necessarily one grounded in physical reality. And I simply say that, you know, as someone who spent a lot of time at places like the National Archives of India and the Salar Jung Museum, and you know the Khuda Bhaksh Museum and the Raza Rampur Library, which have literally thousands of manuscripts from our period that are waiting to be read, right. And until we read them, until we read them extensively, I think it is really difficult for us to make claims about what is and what is not in the archives. So I think that you know, we need to recommit ourselves to an archival practice in South Asia, and we cannot let inconvenience be the thing that prevents us from going to the archive and making statements that probably are not held up on an evidentiary basis.

>> Lhost: Thank you for that. I think that’s a, that’s a good point to end on that we all need to take ourselves back to the archive to find out what they say before we start to talk about what they don’t say.

I would like to thank Abhishek and Tiraana, and Fariba for joining us today for this inaugural first event in our Conversations on South Asia series. And for those of you who missed the announcements at the beginning, our next event will be in November with Mytheli Sreenivas’ new book on reproductive politics.

So follow us on Twitter @SAsiaConverse, look us up on the website, and join us for our upcoming events. Thank you everyone.

Conversations on South Asia with Mircea Raianu

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For almost a century, the multinational Tata Group has been at the top of India’s corporate pyramid. Producing everything from steel, to salt, to software, Tata—whose subsidiaries today operate in one hundred countries worldwide—has been remarkably agile and adept at navigating changes in markets, economics, and politics.

What has fueled Tata’s success and sustained its growth? And how can Tata’s history help us understand the influence of global corporations today?

Join us on Tuesday, January 11 from 12:15–1:30 pm (ET) to hear author and historian Mircea Raianu (University of Maryland), in conversation with Meghna Chaudhuri (Boston College), Stefan Link (Dartmouth College), and Osama Siddiqui (Providence College), discuss Tata’s past and what it holds for capitalism’s future.

Elizabeth Lhost (Dartmouth College) will moderate the discussion.

Register to attend the webinar.

The Conversations on South Asia Series is sponsored by the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund, the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program, and the Department of History at Dartmouth College.

All are welcome.

Conversations on South Asia with Nicole Karapanagiotis

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Today, the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) runs over five hundred centers, dozens of vegetarian restaurants, thousands of local meeting groups, and has millions of followers around the world.

How has ISKCON marketed itself to attract devotees using mantra lounges and yoga studios in Philadelphia and New York? What has it done to rebrand the movement and to recast its message to attract new followers? Nicole Karapanagiotis (Religion and Philosophy, Rutgers University-Camden) explores these questions in Branding Bhakti: Krishna Consciousness and the Makeover of a Movement (Indiana University Press, 2021).

Join us for the next Conversations on South Asia series event on Tuesday, December 7 from 12:15–1:15 pm (EST) to hear the author answer these questions.

Mara Einstein (Media Studies, Queens College) and Reiko Ohnuma (Religion, Dartmouth) will be joining the conversation, moderated by Elizabeth Lhost (History, Dartmouth).

Register online to attend the zoom webinar.

Event attendees can use the promo code SAVE30 to receive a 30% discount when ordering a copy of the book from IUPress.org.

The Conversations on South Asia Series is sponsored by the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund, the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program, and the Department of History at Dartmouth College.

All are welcome to attend.

South Asia Events, 2021–2022

Spring Quarter 2022

Wednesday, May 11, 2022 | 3:00–5:00 pm ET

“South Asian Art Viewing” art exhibit with the South Asian Studies Collective and the Hood Museum.

Additional details forthcoming.

Tuesday, May 10, 2022 | 12:15–1:15 pm ET

Conversations on South Asia with Shenila Khoja-Moolji, author of Sovereign Attachments: Masculinity, Muslimness, and Affective Politics in Pakistan.

Register for the webinar here.

Tuesday, April 12, 2022 | 12:15–1:15 pm ET

Conversations on South Asia with Jessica Namakkal, author of Unsettling Utopia: The Making and Unmaking of French India.

Additional details here.

Winter Quarter 2022

Tuesday, March 8, 2022 | 12:15–1:15 pm ET

Conversations on South Asia with Kyle Gardner, author of The Frontier Complex: Geopolitics and the Making of the India-China Border, 1846–1962.

Additional details here.

Thursday, February 24, 2022 | 4:30-6:30 pm ET

“The Ethics of Adventure: The Changing Dynamics Between the Sherpa Community and Climbers in the Himalayas” with Pasang Yangjee Sherpa (University of British Columbia), author, climber, and guide Freddie Wilkinson (Dartmouth ’02), and climber Matthew Moniz (Dartmouth ’20) 

Additional details here.

Thursday, February 17, 2022 | 12:15-2:15 pm ET

“Lecture: Educating for the Anthropocene” with Peter Sutoris (University of York)

Additional details here.

Tuesday, February 8, 2022 | 12:15-1:15 pm ET

Conversations on South Asia with Sana Haroon (University of Massachusetts Boston) 

Additional details here.

Thursday, January 13, 2022 | 5:00-6:00 pm ET

“Agriculture and Environment in Nineteenth-Century South India” with Prasannan Parthasarathi (Boston College)

Additional details here.

Tuesday, January 11, 2022 | 12:15-1:30 pm ET

Conversations on South Asia with Mircea Raianu (University of Maryland)

Additional details here.

Fall Quarter 2021

Tuesday, December 7, 2022 | 12:15-1:15 pm ET

Conversations on South Asia with Nicole Karapanagiotis (Rutgers University, Camden)

Additional details here.

Thursday, November 11, 2021 | 12:30 pm ET

“India’s Second Covid Wave: Reflections on a longer history of epidemics erasures” with Kavita Sivaramkrishnan (Columbia University)

Additional details here.

Tuesday, November 9, 2021 | 12:15–1:15 pm ET

Conversations on South Asia with Mytheli Sreenivas (The Ohio State University)

Additional details here.

Wednesday, October 13 | 12:15–1:15 pm ET

Conversations on South Asia with Abhishek Kaicker (University of California, Berkeley)

Additional details here.

Public Talk: India’s Second Covid Wave: Reflections on a Longer History of Epidemics and Erasures

Join us Thursday, November 11 at 12:30 PM (ET) for a public talk with Kavita Sivaramakrishnan, Associate Professor in the Departments of Sociomedical Sciences and History at Columbia University. 

The lecture will explore India’s recent COVID surge from the perspective of a past of epidemics and their politics in India in the colonial and post-colonial contexts. It probes a longer history of disease outbreaks and their containment at various scales that involved the power of experts, uses of medical knowledge, and the state power in India.

These changing approaches to epidemics offer insights into state priorities, and a growing marginalization of vulnerable populations as India’s modernization projects and quest for productivity have deepened. It has implied a diminished access to care and inequitable health priorities that preceded the COVID Second Wave and situate the human crisis of pain and loss that unfolded. 

Join Zoom Meeting | Meeting ID: 910 4552 9162  | Passcode: 383735 

Conversations on South Asia with Mytheli Sreenivas

How did reproductive politics become central to producing modern India? In her latest book, Mytheli Sreenivas (The Ohio State University) tackles this question and turns to the history of marriage, the family, and contraception to show that reproduction was central to debates about politics, economics, and the future of independent India.

Join us Tuesday, November 9 from 12:15–1:15 pm (ET) for the next event in the “Conversations on South Asia” series featuring Sreenivas’s Reproductive Politics and the Making of Modern India (University of Washington Press, 2021) to hear more.

Amna Qayyum (Jackson Institute for Global Affairs, Yale University) and Carole McCann (Gender, Women’s, + Sexuality Studies, UMBC) will be joining the author as discussants.

Elizabeth Lhost (History, Dartmouth) will host the conversation, moderated by Douglas Haynes(History, Dartmouth).

Register to attend the webinar.

Event attendees can use the promo code W139 to receive a 30% discount when ordering a copy of the book from the University of Washington Press.

The Conversations on South Asia Series is sponsored by the Bodas Family Academic Programming Fund, the Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages Program, and the Department of History at Dartmouth College.

All are welcome to attend.