Savagery and Colonialism in the Indian Ocean

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A01=Satadru Sen
andaman
Andaman Home
Andaman Islands
Asian Sailors
Author_Satadru Sen
blair
Category=GTM
Category=JHM
Category=NHF
Category=NHTQ
colonial anthropology
colonial encounter Andaman case study
colony
Constance Bay
Convict Society
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Convicts Stationed
East Indies
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extinction narratives
great
Great Andaman
Indian Convicts
indigenous resistance
island
Jungle Mahals
masculinity in empire
penal
Penal Colony
penal colony studies
Penal Transportation
port
racial discourse analysis
ross
Ross Island
Runaway Convicts
Rutland Island
Savage Body
Savage Encounter
Secret Camp
Settler Colony
Sita Venkateswar
Spike Island
Subaltern Whites
Tura Ne
Verrier Elwin
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415497824
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Dec 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book examines the social, political and ideological dimensions of the encounter between the indigenous inhabitants of the Andaman islands, British colonizers and Indian settlers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The British-Indian penal settlements in the Andaman Islands – beginning tentatively in 1789 and renewed on a larger scale in 1858 – represent an extensive, complex experiment in the management of populations through colonial discourses of race, criminality, civilization, and savagery. Focussing on the ubiquitous characterization of the Andaman islanders as ‘savages’, this study explores the particular relationship between savagery and the practice of colonialism.

Satadru Sen examines savagery and the savage as dynamic components of colonialism in South Asia: not intellectual abstractions with clear and fixed meanings, but politically ‘alive’ and fiercely contested products of the colony. Illuminating and historicizing the processes by which the discourse of savagery goes through multiple and fundamental shifts between the late eighteenth and late nineteenth centuries, he shows the links and breaks between these shifts and changing ideas of race, adulthood and masculinity in the Andamans, British India, Britain and in the wider empire. He also highlights the implications of these changes for the ‘savages’ themselves. At the broadest level, this book re-examines the relationship between the modern and the primitive in a colonial world.

Satadru Sen teaches South Asian History at Queens College at City University of New York, USA.  He is the author of  Colonial Childhoods: The Juvenile Periphery of India, 1860-1945; Migrant Races: Empire, Identity and K.S. Ranjitsinhji; Disciplining Punishment: Colonialism and Convict Society in the Andaman Islands and (as co-editor) Confronting the Body: The Politics of Physicality in Colonial and Post-Colonial South Asia.

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