The United States and South Asia from the Age of Empire to Decolonization
Title
The United States and South Asia from the Age of Empire to Decolonization
Subtitle
A History of Entanglements
Price
€ 128,99
ISBN
9789400604421
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
336
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
Hardback - € 129,00
Table of Contents
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
(HARALD FISCHER-TINÉ, SUJEET GEORGE, and NICO SLATE), Introduction: Religion, Politics, and Development . Mapping the Sites and Domains of Indo-American Exchange, c. 1850-1970
Part. I: Religion and Culture
1. (BRADLEY SHOPE), A Gold rush, Steamships, and Blackface: The New York Serenaders in San Francisco and India, early-1850s
2. (SUSAN M. RYAN), The Sepoy Rebellion and American Global Ambition
3. (PHILIP DESLIPPE), Fakir: How a Word from India Moved Through American Popular Culture for Nearly a Century
Part. II: Missionaries and Political Activists
4. (JOANNA SIMONOW), American Humanitarianism in Colonial South Asia: The Famine Relief of the American Marathi Mission in Bombay, 1896–1900
5. (HARALD FISCHER-TINÉ), ‘One fifth of the world’s boyhood’: American ‘Boyology’ and the YMCA’s work with early adolescents in India (c. 1900-1950)
6. (NEILESH BOSE), Taraknath Das: Race and Citizenship between India and the U.S.A.
7. (NICO SLATE), Socialism, Nonviolence, and Civil Rights: The American Journeys of Rammanohar Lohia
Part III: Social Sciences, Development Initiatives and Technocracy
8. (SUJEET GEORGE), Constructing an Indian Sociology: ‘Karimpur’, U.S: Area Studies and Cold War Social Science
9. (PRAKASH KUMAR), The Development of Uttar Pradesh Agricultural University
10. (NICOLE SACKLEY), The Bankura Horse as Development Object: Women’s Work, Indo-American Exchanges, and the Global Handicraft Trade
(MARK REEVES), Afterword
Bibliography
About the Authors
Index .

Harald Fischer-Tiné, Nico Slate (eds)

The United States and South Asia from the Age of Empire to Decolonization

A History of Entanglements

The contributions assembled in this volume present cutting-edge research that examines the network of Indo-American interconnections over a wider time frame. The case studies stretch into the early decades of the American republic hinting at a longer history of mutual influence and exchange, beyond the registers of ‘the American century’ of globalization. By bringing together academics working across disciplines ranging from history to cultural and literary studies, comparative religion, political science and sociology, this volume thus foregrounds and historicizes the complex, multi-sited, polyvalent nature of the Indo-US encounter. At the same time, the book explore the possibilities of methodologically engaging with established categories—such as the nation, the imperial and Empire—and test alternative typologies to better understand this encounter. Taken together, our authors reconstruct the myriad ways in which Americans and Indians have engaged with each other through trade, diplomacy, intellectual comradeship, missionary evangelism and revolutionary fervor.
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Editors

Harald Fischer-Tiné

Harald Fischer-Tiné is a Professor of Modern Global History at ETH-Zürich. Alongside many other publications, he is the author of Shyamji Krishnavarma: Sanskrit, Sociology and Anti-imperialism (New Delhi, 2014) and The YMCA in Late Colonial India: Modernization, Philanthropy and American Soft Power in South Asia (London, 2022). He is currently working on issues related to culture and consumption during India’s ‘Jazz Age’.

Nico Slate

Nico Slate is Professor in the Department of History at Carnegie Mellon University. He is the author of Colored Cosmopolitanism: The Shared Struggle for Freedom in the United States and India (Harvard University Press, 2012); The Prism of Race: W.E.B. Du Bois, Langston Hughes, Paul Robeson and the Colored World of Cedric Dover (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014); Gandhi’s Search for the Perfect Diet: Eating With the World In Mind (University of Washington Press, 2019); and Lord Cornwallis Is Dead: The Struggle for Democracy in the United States and India (Harvard University Press, 2019). He is currently writing a history of the American civil rights movement focused on the Highlander Folk School.