Article ID: CBB221245616

“No Former Travellers having Attained such a Height on the Earth’s Surface”: Instruments, Inscriptions, and Bodies in the Himalaya, 1800–1830 (2018)

unapi

East India Company surveyors began gaining access to the high Himalaya in the 1810s, at a time when the mountains were taking on increasing political significance as the northern borderlands of British India. Though never as idiosyncratic as surveyors insisted, these were spaces in which instruments, fieldbook inscriptions, and bodies were all highly prone to failure. The ways surveyors managed these failures (both rhetorically and in practice) demonstrate the social performances required to establish credible knowledge in a world in which the senses were scrambled. The resulting tensions reveal an ongoing disconnect in understanding between those displaced not only from London, but also from Calcutta, something insufficiently emphasized in previous histories of colonial science. By focusing on the early nineteenth century, often overlooked in favor of the later period, this article shows the extent to which the scientific, imaginative, and political constitution of the Himalaya was haphazard and contested.

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Authors & Contributors
Sarkar, Oyndrila
Lowther, David
Barford, Megan
Chetan Singh
Briant, Pierre
Banerjee, Sandeep
Journals
Archives of Natural History
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
Victorian Literature and Culture
Science in Context
Medical History
Journal of Historical Geography
Publishers
University of Chicago Press
Brill
Harper Collins
Bio-Chitra
Concepts
Colonialism
Surveying
Great Britain, colonies
Science and government
Field work
Natural history
People
Humboldt, Alexander von
Conté, Nicolas-Jacques
Vigors, Nicholas Aylward
Hardwicke, Thomas
Samuel Bourne
Swainson, William
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century, early
Ancient
20th century, late
17th century
Places
India
Himalayan Mountains (Nepal)
Egypt
Hellenistic world
Nepal
Macedonia
Institutions
British East India Company
East India Company (English)
Royal Society of London
British Admiralty
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
United States. Geological Survey
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