Idolatry and the colonial idea of India : visions of horror, allegories of enlightenment

Author(s)

    • Ganguly, Swagato

Bibliographic Information

Idolatry and the colonial idea of India : visions of horror, allegories of enlightenment

Swagato Ganguly

(South Asian history and culture)

Routledge, 2019, c2018

  • : pbk

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Note

"First issued in paperback 2019" -- T.p. verso

Bibliography: p. [199]-205

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book explores literary and scholarly representations of India from the 18th to the early 20th centuries in South Asia and the West with idolatry as a point of entry. It charts the intellectual horizon within which the colonial idea of India was framed, tracing sources and genealogies which inform even contemporary descriptions of the subcontinent. Using idolatry as a concept-metaphor, the book traverses an ambitious path through the works of William Jones, James Mill, Friedrich Max Muller, John Ruskin, Alice Perrin, E. M. Forster, Rammohan Roy and Bankimchandra Chatterjee. It reveals how religion and paganism, history and literature, Oriental thought and Western metaphysics, and social reform and education were unfolded and debated by them. The author underlines how idolatry, irrationality and social disorder came to be linked by discourses informed by Enlightenment, missionary rhetoric and colonial reason. This book will appeal to scholars and researchers in history, anthropology, literature, culture studies, philosophy, religion, sociology and South Asian studies as well as anyone interested in colonial studies and histories of the Enlightenment.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments. Introduction: Idolatry from Plato to Indiana Jones 1. William Jones and James Mill: The Duplicity of the Colonial Image 2. Idolatry and Fetishism in the Fin-de-siecle: the Orientalism of Friedrich Max Muller 3. The Aesthetic Image and the Idolatrous Grotesque: John Ruskin, Alice Perrin and E.M. Forster 4. Reforming Idolatrous Hinduism: Rammohan Roy and Bankimchandra Chatterjee 5. Conclusion: Idolatry, Ideology and the Nation-State. References. Index

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