Most of us grew up with the knowledge that India had been a British colony—the jewel in the crown of the Raj. Even those with slightly deeper knowledge who knew that France had once been a contender for the Indian empire consider it a romantic interlude between the Mughals and their self-proclaimed Anglo-successors. Yet our ideas about India, fundamentally wrought from the colonial recasting of knowledge in strictly ‘Western’ categories—religion, history, politics, economy, mythology, and even the modern self-conception of race (Aryan v/s Dravidian)—were drawn from the studies of French Indologists. So France, a failed temporal conqueror, had actually conquered ‘India’—the idea. This book traces the process by which France ‘claimed India’ by defining India through caste, history, race and religion. The obvious question is, of course, why? Why did France invest all this energy, time, and money into defining an area she no longer controlled politically? To challenge the British? To demonstrate her own commitment to the ‘civilizing mission’? This book demonstrates how France's fascination with India stemmed from all of these motives, as well as being a key component of her own national self-definition in the nineteenth century.

India: A Land of Wonders or of Monstrosities? The Writings of Missionaries

India: A Land of Wonders or of Monstrosities? The Writings of Missionaries

India: A land of wonders or of monstrosities? the writings of missionaries

Image 1.1: Postcard from French India, 1910; French Missionary and Local Statue

Image 1.2: Postcard from French India, 1910; Gopuram

Image 1.1 above is a postcard from French India dated to 1910. It shows a French missionary standing next to a statue of a local God sculpted in the traditional, ‘Dravidian’ style1 and described as the ‘face of the devil’, while Image 1.2 is the picture of the gopuram, or tower topping a local temple. The contrast between the obviously negative left image and the neutral right image was typical of French missionary sentiments about Indic religion as far back as the ...

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