Thesis ID: CBB212580019

Ungovernable Winds: The Weather Sciences in South Asia, 1864-1945 (2019)

unapi

Carson, Sarah (Author)
Prakash, Gyan (Advisor)


Princeton University
Prakash, Gyan
Publication date: 2019
Language: English


Publication Date: 2019
Physical Details: 340

In 1875, the Government of India established the India Meteorological Department (IMD) in a defensive response to a succession of horrifying cyclones and famines. Its observational network quickly became the most extensive and important in the tropical latitudes, generating data on the Indian Ocean region’s distinctive weather phenomena: most famously, its seasonal monsoons and hurricanes. “Ungovernable Winds” reads state and scientific records alongside newspaper criticism and competing lay publications to highlight the importance of weather in debates over good governance, the modernization of prediction, and theories of Indian nature’s essential “difference” from Europe. It argues that India’s meteorologists played a definitive if reluctant role in promoting the “scientific forecast” as a necessary technology of the modern bureaucratic state, foundational for its military and budgetary practices and later economic planning. The dissertation also foregrounds diverse strains of public commentary on IMD services, emphasizing the gulf between scientific governance in theory and in practice. Failures of official prediction left open spaces for pluralistic weather reasonings, advanced by poets, learned pandits, local astrologers, sailors, and increasingly after 1900, Indian employees of the IMD. The example of meteorology illustrates that Britain’s “modern” science was not always an effective tool of domination, or persuasion; in this case, it frequently proved a source of illegitimacy. Chapter One explores the disjuncture between nineteenth-century meteorologists’ anxieties about weather-related disasters and their reassurances about the imminent promises of rationalization. Chapter Two shifts from discourse to material analysis. It presents the IMD as both a fragile, contingent infrastructure and a workplace, revealing how the everyday activities, resistances, and initiatives of Indian technicians and scientists shaped the direction of tropical meteorological science. Chapters Three and Four examine the intellectual and cultural histories of the IMD’s most well-known public services—coastal storm-warning and seasonal monsoon forecasting, respectively—paying particular attention to episodes of widespread controversy. Situated at the intersection of environmental history, the social history of knowledge, and the histories of state-making and political economy, the dissertation examines the negotiations between different forms of expertise in the scientific construction of South Asian, tropical nature.

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Authors & Contributors
Naylor, Simon
Endfield, Georgina H.
Vetter, Jeremy
Anderson, K. D.
Crewe, M. E.
Garden, Don
Journals
Public Interest Report
British Journal for the History of Science
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Journal of Historical Geography
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
Mariner's Mirror
Publishers
Vrije Universiteit te Amsterdam (Netherlands)
Palgrave Macmillan
University of California, Los Angeles
Fagbokforl
Concepts
Meteorology
Weather
Science and war; science and the military
Weather forecasting
Climate and climatology
Travel; exploration
People
Beaufort, Sir Francis
Bjerknes, Vilhelm
Mahony, Martin
Manley, Gordon
Reid, William
Smyth, Charles Piazzi
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
13th century
18th century
Ancient
Places
Great Britain
South Asia
India
United States
Indian Ocean
Europe
Institutions
Great Britain. Royal Navy
United States. Weather Bureau
Great Britain. Royal Air Force
British Admiralty
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