Lezing 'How the Queen of European Sciences ascended the Seats of Traditional Learning in South Asian Colonies'

Voor wie
Alumni , Journalisten , Medewerkers , Privépersonen , Studenten
Wanneer
23-05-2024 van 14:00 tot 16:00
Waar
Universiteitsbibliotheek, Rozier 9, 9000 Gent
Voertaal
Engels
Door wie
Sarton Centre for History of Science
Contact
Pieter.Beck@UGent.be
Website
https://www.sarton.ugent.be/how-queen-european-sciences-ascended-seats-traditional-learning-south-asian-colonies

Dr. Pranav Prakash will discuss the first-generation of Indian philologists and their interaction with European traditions.

Although Jesuit missionaries introduced a moveable type printing press in Goa as early as 1556, it was not until the mid-19th century that print effectively became the dominant mode of textual production and academic scholarship in South Asia. The widespread availability of affordable lithographic and moveable type technologies in the mid-19th century paved the way for a new generation of Indian scholars from diverse cultural, caste and class backgrounds to reflect upon the methods and goals of philology, alongside the materiality of book objects. Their writings elucidate the complex relationship philology—as a discipline—forged between Eurocentric knowledge production, anti-colonial movement, reformist ideology, nationalist historiography, regional identity and ethical scholarship.

My presentation will discuss how the first-generation of Indian philologists grappled with and renegotiated the differences between the European history of philology and their homegrown traditions.