Lezing 'Perpetual Fluctuation: The Rivers of Bengal as Historical Agents, 1750–1800'

Voor wie
Studenten , Medewerkers
Wanneer
11-03-2026 van 16:00 tot 18:00
Waar
Livestream
Voertaal
Engels
Door wie
Department of Languages and Cultures - Faculty of Arts and Philosophy
Contact
akshara.ravishankar@ugent.be
Website
https://www.india.ugent.be/2026-gcsas-lecture-series-more-than-human-south-asia2/

Lecture by Dr. Eduardo Acosta (Stanford University)

In the second half of the eighteenth century, Bengal's rivers were shifting as they always did. Channels silted, flooded, and abandoned their courses with a regularity that confounded European surveyors and indigenous observers alike.

This paper argues that the instability of Bengal's landscape did not merely complicate the colonial project of cartographic knowledge: it actively shaped the epistemological frameworks through which that knowledge was produced.

Drawing on manuscript surveys, correspondence, and published geographical treatises, Dr. Acosta examines how EIC surveyors, most prominently James Rennell, developed ways of thinking about landscape as dynamic and historically legible rather than fixed and mappable in any final sense.

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