Article ID: CBB981892256

Science and War at the Limit of Empire: William Griffith with the Army of the Indus (2020)

unapi

In 1839, at the outset of the First Anglo-Afghan War, East India Company surgeon and naturalist William Griffith (1810–1845) set out for Afghanistan with the so-called ‘Army of the Indus’. That science, empire, and war were inextricably linked in the nineteenth century is widely acknowledged by scholars, as is the way that natural history collecting was dependent on military (and especially naval) infrastructure. However, the everyday practices and negotiations that underpinned collecting in the context of colonial warfare remain less well understood. Here, Griffith's scientific activities—especially the collection of plant and fish specimens—provide an instructive case, constantly circumscribed by his operating within an invading and then occupying army. Tensions frequently emerged between military and scientific objectives, as well as between Griffith and the numerous collectors and assistants he relied on within the army column and occupied territory (including a broker named Abdul Rozak, a series of fishermen, and a mullah at Kandahar). By making a close study of the relationship between military and scientific practice during the First Anglo-Afghan War (later remembered as one of the most notorious ‘disasters’ in the history of the British Empire), this article demonstrates the intimate linkages between imperial violence and knowledge production in this period. More broadly, an examination of Griffith's collecting practices reveals the way in which imperial geographical and environmental perceptions of Afghanistan were shaped and reified at a crucial moment in its history.

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Authors & Contributors
Nair, Savithri Preetha
Foliard, Daniel
Zach Sell
Nasiri-Moghaddam, Nader
Kathleen Davidson
Miller, Emelin
Journals
Archives of Natural History
Scientia Canadensis: Journal of the History of Canadian Science, Technology, and Medicine
Science in Context
Museum History Journal
Journal of the History of Collections
Journal of the History of Biology
Publishers
Routledge
Manchester University Press
The University of North Carolina Press
Univ. Chicago Press
Indiana University Press
Berghahn Books
Concepts
Great Britain, colonies
Imperialism
Natural history
Collectors and collecting
Colonialism
Museums
People
Mīrzā Malkum, Khān
Thurston, Edgar
Hooker, Joseph Dalton
Darwin, Charles Robert
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century, early
17th century
20th century
16th century
Places
Great Britain
India
Canada
North America
Afghanistan
Arctic regions
Institutions
Madras Museum
East India Company (English)
British East India Company
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