Posted on: 1 April 2013

New Book:
Document Raj: Writing and Scribes in Early Colonial South India
By Bhavani Raman
Published by University of Chicago Press, Chicago - 2012

Historians of British colonial rule in India have noted both the place of military might and the imposition of new cultural categories in the making of Empire, but Bhavani Raman, in Document Raj, uncovers a lesser-known story of power: the power of bureaucracy. Drawing on extensive archival research in the files of the East India Company’s administrative offices in Madras, she tells the story of a bureaucracy gone awry in a fever of documentation practices that grew ever more abstract—and the power, both economic and cultural, this created.

In order to assert its legitimacy and value within the British Empire, the East India Company was diligent about record keeping. Raman shows, however, that the sheer volume of their document production allowed colonial managers to subtly but substantively manipulate records for their own ends, increasingly drawing the real and the recorded further apart. While this administrative sleight of hand increased the company’s reach and power within the Empire, it also bolstered profoundly new orientations to language, writing, memory, and pedagogy for the officers and Indian subordinates involved. Immersed in a subterranean world of delinquent scribes, translators, village accountants, and entrepreneurial fixers, Document Raj maps the shifting boundaries of the legible and illegible, the legal and illegitimate, that would usher India into the modern world.

Bhavani Raman is Assistant Professor of South Asian History at Princeton University.

Preview and buy this book at Amazon:

http://amzn.to/Z42WHQ


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Looks like another book that needs to be read with a cold towel wrapped around one's head: "Attention to such infelicitous documentary practice that is derived from writing's iterable qualities has shown that the "illegibility" of written documents endemic in bureaucratic states instantiates a peculiar paradox." Phew!

The current Indian GoI has continued many of the colonial suppression mechanisms willy nilly. That is what happens when you copy without understanding.

They look like Maratha's