Currying favor gauri viswanathan biography
Currying Favor: The Beginnings of English Literary Study in British India 91 undermined by the gathering tide of reform that accompanied the restructuring..
Dangerous Liasons: Ch. 5-Currying Favor and Ch. 6-The Nation as Imagined Community
In Chapter 5, Gauri Viswanathan recounts an aspect of British colonialism that is sometimes forgotten in the midst of the horrors of colonialism: academia.
34 Citations · 3 References.
Specifically, she discusses the history of the colonization of India and the remarkable force of the British literary canon in constituting British hegemony over native Indian populations. The article is very historical in nature and fleshes out debates colonists had.
For example, the British decided to implement their educational system in India because they were worried about the effects of the nabobs, "wealthy Europeans whose huge fortunes were amassed in India" on the Indians ().
It's all terribly paternalistic and rings strongly of the innocent savage trope, but the English thought they were setting a bad example and that it should be recti