Colonial Archaeology in South Asia
The Legacy of Sir Mortimer Wheeler
Price: 1100.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195690774
Publication date:
17/10/2007
Hardback
Price: 1100.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195690774
Publication date:
17/10/2007
Hardback
Himanshu Prabha Ray
Suitable for: This book will interest scholars, teachers, and students of Indian history and archaeology, as well as anthropologists, art historians, and the interested reader.
Rights: World Rights
Himanshu Prabha Ray
Description
This book discusses the practice and institutionalization of the discipline of archaeology under British rule and its current manifestations. Using Sir Mortimer Wheeler's tenure as the Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India (1944—48), it assesses the extent to which colonial intervention shaped the nascent discipline in South Asia. The study investigates two important areas generally neglected in most histories of archaeology of the subcontinent–conservation practices and the display of archaeological artefacts in museums. It also examines topical questions like the government control of academic disciplines like archaeology and the role of the discipline in the postcolonial period. Ray also provides an overview of the major events and debates that emerged in the archaeology of the subcontinent leading up to the 1940s. She discusses the contemporary academic scenario, Wheeler's Indian contemporaries, his contributions to the study of the subject, and his agenda for the Archaeological Survey of India. In doing so, she highlights how his work and methodology continue to dominate the study of archaeology in the postcolonial period as well. The author draws on a wide range of source material, some being used for the first time–the archives of Archaeological Survey of India and Mortimer Wheeler's private papers– to present the changing paradigms within which the past has been studied.
Himanshu Prabha Ray
Himanshu Prabha Ray
Description
This book discusses the practice and institutionalization of the discipline of archaeology under British rule and its current manifestations. Using Sir Mortimer Wheeler's tenure as the Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India (1944—48), it assesses the extent to which colonial intervention shaped the nascent discipline in South Asia. The study investigates two important areas generally neglected in most histories of archaeology of the subcontinent–conservation practices and the display of archaeological artefacts in museums. It also examines topical questions like the government control of academic disciplines like archaeology and the role of the discipline in the postcolonial period. Ray also provides an overview of the major events and debates that emerged in the archaeology of the subcontinent leading up to the 1940s. She discusses the contemporary academic scenario, Wheeler's Indian contemporaries, his contributions to the study of the subject, and his agenda for the Archaeological Survey of India. In doing so, she highlights how his work and methodology continue to dominate the study of archaeology in the postcolonial period as well. The author draws on a wide range of source material, some being used for the first time–the archives of Archaeological Survey of India and Mortimer Wheeler's private papers– to present the changing paradigms within which the past has been studied.
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