Thesis ID: CBB001562102

Village Visions: Science and Technology in the Bengal Countryside, c. 1860--1947 (2004)

unapi

Petrie, Ian C. (Author)


University of Pennsylvania
Ludden, David


Publication Date: 2004
Edition Details: Advisor: Ludden, David
Physical Details: 295 pp.
Language: English

This dissertation provides a historical dimension to development studies by tracing, for one region, the emergence of official and popular discourses on rural poverty and "backwardness" and the prospect of their amelioration through science, social science and technology. Combining social, economic and environmental history with the history of science and ideas, and employing diverse sources (such as testimony presented to proliferating state commissions, landlords' diaries, theses of students sent abroad for scientific training, poetry and fiction) I attempt to reconstruct the material and cultural circumstances in which a modernizing vision for the countryside was taken up in colonial Bengal, a process reflecting the complex interplay between both global and local forces, and dynamic understandings of region and nation. The experience of famine (and the specter of it elsewhere) spurred increasingly regular interest and intervention in rural conditions by the state and local elites, and discourses on episodic crises gave way to considerations of poverty. Solutions mooted first involved attempts to extend the (productive) agricultural frontier through the promotion of migration and plough cultivation among indigenous peoples.After the turn of the century, diverse groups sought to improve villages and villagers using scientific and social scientific tools. Technological change, from the largest (railways) to the smallest (seeds) presented differential costs and opportunities, reflecting changing rural power relations, in which rising actors included not only an increasingly interventionist state but also ascendant entrepreneurial elites and transnational businesses. Rather than present any simple transmission of metropolitan ideals and instruments from one elite to another, the dissertation shows how Britons and Bengalis alike participated in emergent international intellectual and economic networks. The middle class's engagement with ideas of rural development were strongly influenced by regional environments and identities--considerations also shaped the response of peasants to the initiatives putatively enacted in their interest. The vicissitudes of village uplift in the colonial period clearly anticipate the contours of development work after independence, and this history must inform our attempts to engage constructively with rural South Asia.

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Description Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 65/06 (2004): 2324. UMI pub. no. 3138064.


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Authors & Contributors
Ashraf Wani, Mohd
Bhat, Rouf Ahmad
Rahaman, Maidul
William J. Glover
Sehrawat, Samiksha
Chandra, Gautam
Journals
Indian Journal of History of Science
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Science Technology and Society
Journal of Asian Studies
Environment and History
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Publishers
University of Minnesota Press
Univ. Chicago Press
Oxford University Press
Orient Longman
Liverpool University Press
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Great Britain, colonies
Colonialism
Medicine
Science and society
Imperialism
Botany
People
Howard, Albert, Sir
Haffkine, Waldemar Mordecai
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
18th century
17th century
Enlightenment
16th century
Places
India
Great Britain
Calcutta (India)
South Africa
Pakistan
Latin America
Institutions
Botanic Garden (Calcutta, India)
East India Company (English)
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