The Other From Within: Indian Anthropologists and the Birth of the Nation

Description

Where do the intellectual origins of Indian anthropology lie?

Who were these anthropologists anyway? Who were they influenced by?

And how crucial was the contribution of interlocutors and collaborators to Indian anthropology?

A blue stamp with many hand-drawn faces. Text reds 1971 Census Centenary India

A stamp commemorating the centenary of the Indian census in 1971. The Indian census is one of the sources used for this project. Image credit: Sergey Nezhinkiy/Alamy Stock Photo

This project traces the development of anthropology as an academic discipline in India and as an instrument of state formation and decolonisation in the early- to mid-twentieth century. Rather than simply looking at anthropology as an outgrowth of colonial ideas, we also try to answer questions like:

  • How did Indian anthropologists contribute to global networks that sought to re-shape the outlook and legacy of the discipline, especially in a world marching towards decolonisation?
  • How was this aided or impeded by the role of India’s government and other academic and cultural institutions?
  • Did India’s developmental path benefit from the knowledge that these anthropologists produce? 
  • Apart from tracing the many circulations, networks, and movements of ideas, intellectuals, and their practices, we also focus on the subjects of their discipline: who were the people that these anthropologists studied? How did they react to these researchers’ work?

Case Study: D. N. Majumdar

One of the most important figures in early post-independence India’s social science, was the anthropologist D. N. Majumdar, who worked on ways of connecting anthropology to some of the key scientific advances of the time.

In some of his work he allied with India’s most important statistician, P. C. Mahalanobis, to make use of census data from 1941, exploring the physical characteristics of different communities in terms of statistical correlations. These kinds of studies connected out to other large-scale national projects of physical anthropology which tried to make sense of the ‘origins’ of people at India’s margins.

This included the famous Rup Kund find, in which hundreds of sets of bodily remains were found in one site in the 1940s Himalayan region, and studied in the 1950s. Anthropologists (including Majumdar) and scientists eventually discovered that the bodies had been victims of disasters taking place over 1000 years apart. Unexpectedly, the skeletal remains were traced to far-flung origins, including the Mediterranean region as well as South Asia. Some of these remains are still housed in the University of Lucknow, Department of Anthropology, and in the 1950s they contributed to debates about national trends in Indian anthropology.

Read more about this case study on The Other From Within project website.

Contributions to the Field

The first of its kind, this project examines in a holistic and systematic way how anthropology shaped the relationship between India’s state and its subjects, and how it contributed to what we describe as India’s ‘intellectual decolonisation’ in the years between 1910-1970.

The history of anthropology in India is largely underdeveloped. There are two reasons for this: 

  • First, the attempts to trace the history of anthropology across the world are relatively new, starting in the late 1980s. Not surprisingly, these inquiries have had little to say about the growth of anthropology in the Global South, let alone India.
  • Secondly, the role of Indian anthropologists working in the twentieth century has been overshadowed by the focus on the role of colonial ethnographers and the legacy of the colonial state in South Asia.

A more thorough engagement with the lives and careers of Indian academics is necessary to reveal that the tensions of anthropological knowledge in India were not merely a European problem, nor were they resolved by independence. In fact, after 1947, newer questions about decolonisation, development, national unity, and ‘modernity’ often exacerbated these tensions.

The first generations of Indian social scientists were British-educated and often accepted many western theories about their own people. Yet, the rise of nationalist politics awoke them to the problems of colonial disciplines like anthropology, pushing them to shape newer ways of defining India, both at home and abroad. By tracing the formation of an Indian school of anthropology, this study sheds much needed light on the often neglected history of intellectual decolonisation.

The legacy of these ideological battles may be found not only in the writings of these scholars but also in the institutions they left behind. Organisations such as the Anthropological Survey of India, the Indian Sociological Society, the Bombay Anthropological Society and the Ethnographic and Folk Culture Society, for example, defined the main characteristics of Indian culture and discarded what they saw as foreign elements. These institutions had strong international connections. Their staff collaborated, for example, with the Ford Foundation, UNESCO, and the Pitts Rivers Museum in Oxford.

Bearing these diverse elements of anthropology in India in mind, this project adopts a holistic, inter-disciplinary approach that combines elements of intellectual, institutional, and social history.

Impact and Knowledge Exchange

The main users and stakeholders in this research include policy organisations (including government departments), museums, institutes and archives, and community organisations based in India. These include:

Events

December 2019: Networking Event

Through this networking and research sharing event in Kolkata, we discussed possible avenues of alliance and co-authored research with the Director of the Anthropological Survey of India, participants from the Asiatic Society of West Bengal and academics including sociologists, political scientists and anthropologists. This event was organised in association with the Asiatic Society of India.

Read more on The Other From Within project website.

October 2020: Mid-Project Workshop

Held online, this workshop involved international scholars such as Professor Bhangya Bhukya, Dr Aya Ikegame, Dr Uday Chandra, Dr Arkotong Longkumer, Dr Kriti Kapila, museum curators/directors including Professor Sarit Chaudhuri, Dr Vibha Joshi, and community activists including Mr. Dakxinkumar Bajrange.

Read more on The Other From Within project website.

July 2022: Conference

This hybrid conference was hosted by the University of Leeds. It involved a team of curators from the Manchester Museum, and The Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, discussing the theme of colonial exhibits and museum repatriation. 

Outputs

  • A series of blogs on the history of Indian anthropology authored by project team, which can be found on The Other From Within project website.
  • William Gould, Santosh Das and Christophe Jaffrelot, eds., Ambedkar in London (London: Hurst, 2022).
  • William Gould, ‘Measuring Race, Space and the Citizen: Anthropology and Statistics in Early Post-Independence India’, South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies (2024). Read the article on the journal’s website.
  • A special issue of South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, arising out of the three workshop, entitled ‘Between the Field and the Gallery: Exploring Anthropological Knowledge in South Asia’, (forthcoming).

Further Links

UK Gateway to Research page for the project.

Arts and Humanities Research Council.

The Other From Within project website.