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About this book
Learn how the deep history of nature became a dominant paradigm of historical thinking, through a study of landscapes of India.
Winner of the BSHS Pickstone Prize by the British Society for the History of Science
In the nineteenth century, teams of men began digging the earth like never before. Sometimes this diggingāoften for sewage, transport, or mineralsārevealed human remains. Other times, archaeological excavation of ancient cities unearthed prehistoric fossils, while excavations for irrigation canals revealed buried cities. Concurrently, geologists, ethnologists, archaeologists, and missionaries were also digging into ancient texts and genealogies and delving into the lives and bodies of indigenous populations, their myths, legends, and pasts. One pursuit was intertwined with another in this encounter with the earth and its inhabitantsāpast, present, and future.
In Inscriptions of Nature, Pratik Chakrabarti argues that, in both the real and the metaphorical digging of the earth, the deep history of nature, landscape, and people became indelibly inscribed in the study and imagination of antiquity. The first book to situate deep history as an expression of political, economic, and cultural power, this volume shows that it is complicit in the European and colonial appropriation of global nature, commodities, temporalities, and myths. The book also provides a new interpretation of the relationship between nature and history. Arguing that the deep history of the earth became pervasive within historical imaginations of monuments, communities, and territories in the nineteenth century, Chakrabarti studies these processes in the Indian subcontinent, from the banks of the Yamuna and Ganga rivers to the Himalayas to the deep ravines and forests of central India. He also examines associated themes of Hindu antiquarianism, sacred geographies, and tribal aboriginality.
Based on extensive archival research, the book provides insights into state formation, mining of natural resources, and the creation of national topographies. Driven by the geological imagination of India as well as its landscape, people, past, and destiny, Inscriptions of Nature reveals how human evolution, myths, aboriginality, and colonial state formation fundamentally defined Indian antiquity.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction. Past Unlimited
- 1. The Canal of Zabita Khan: The Nature of History
- 2. Ancient Alluviums: The Geology of Antiquity
- 3. Mythic Pasts and Naturalized Histories: The Deep History of Sacred Geography
- 4. Remnants of the Race: Geology and the Naturalization of Human Antiquity
- 5. The Other Side of Tethys: Gondwana and the Geologies of Primitivism
- Conclusion. The New Deep History
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index