Vol 8 No 3

Book Review: The Alchemy of Empire: Abject Materials and the Technologies of Colonialism

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Reviewed by Pramod K Nayar, University of Hyderabad

Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.31

Rajani Sudan, The Alchemy of Empire: Abject Materials and the Technologies of Colonialism. Orient BlackSwan, 2016. Pp. 223. ISBN 978-81-250-6290-5.

Received August 21, 2016; Published August 25, 2016


Alchemy Empire-F.cdr

The transnational turn to English history has resulted in sustained attention to the non-European factors that shaped British identity from the 17th century. Rajani Sudan’s work is situated within this turn, so to speak.

Sudan’s interest lies in material culture and commodities, from muds to nutmegs and inoculation, and their role in imperial discourses, the fashioning of English identity and as instruments of interracial relations. She reads travel narratives, letters from and to the East India Company offices, commentaries and tracts, alongside literary texts to demonstrate how ‘India’s technology scientific practice, and epistemology informed European Enlightenment values and socio-political norms’ (1). It is her contention that ‘some of the “classical” Enlightenment scientific knowledge is not European in origin but emerges from a far wider circulation’ (5). Initial encounters with Indian techne and commodities produced anxieties, which then the British transmuted into ‘knowledge’ that then became Western/European science.

Thus, Sudan demonstrates how Indian mortar becomes a means of building British buildings in Madras’ Fort St George. Mortar is appropriated within discourses of science as well as in actual construction of walls and houses that then enable the English to separate White Town from Black Town, and to transform the city into an icon of British imperialism. Mortar was the key to establishing Englishness, in other words. Sudan also notes how the commonplace nutmeg, once the key to Linnaean taxonomy, and a key commodity of England’s global spice trade get relegated to the back shelf. It was appropriated into scientific discourse and became an ‘abstraction’ (64), as a result.

In the case of ice, Sudan argues via Orwell’s Burmese Days and select non-fictional texts, the substance marked the difference between the tropics and Europe, but also between different locations within the tropics. Ice, she writes, ‘has a metonymic relation to the metropole, functioning as the material that divides the “jungle life” of teak extraction from the urban pleasures of Rangoon’ (77). Robert Barker discovering ice-making in Allahabad, attributed the technology, notes Sudan, to witchery (83). Then, embarking on greater research he discovers the modes by which temperature control was achieved by Indian ice-makers. This radically altered the English experience of India itself for, as Sudan writes, it seemed possible to ‘us[e] the inventions and techne of Indian science [to] circumvent the actual situation of these East India Company officers, stuck in an inhospitable landscape, and lured with the promise of fabulous profit’ (90).

Turning to inoculation, Sudan traces the discourse and practice that is documented in Mary Montagu’s Turkish letters and the discovery, in India, of a native system of healing that is then merged with the European system. JZ Holwell and others documented a native medical practice that predated Turkish and European innovations and inventions. Using foreign bodies, long deemed inferior, into English bodies was unacceptable, given fears of contamination. British scientific epistemology may have been informed by xenophobia and hence these sources of possible prophylactics for smallpox were ignored. India, defined in imperial discourse as primitive, could not be offering a solution, argues Sudan. Necessity, however, altered epistemology and ‘methods of inoculation forced Britons to suspend, however theoretically, the xenophobia that structured cultural, metropolitan, and civic British identity’ (113). Sudan shifts attention to literary texts such as Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure and Dracula to demonstrate the widespread fears over contamination and foreign bodies that she had tracked in the scientific and medical discourse from the 18th century.

In her chapter on plasters and paper, Sudan explores the European discovery of Indian paper-making processes.  Via Jane Austen’s Emma, Sudan looks at the mix or alchemic transformation of commercial materials into discourse and abstractions, including social values such as the woman’s reading habits or intellectual labour. ‘The labor entrenched in correspondence from rope to paper, from hand to pen, from letter to recipient’ for Sudan is an allegory of such an alchemic transformation. Sudan also notes how ‘Indian physical and intellectual labor that extracts, refines, and disseminates the properties of the substances … the technique and techne that constituted the Indian intellectual property’ was part of the ‘traffic’ by the British in India and later by scientific societies responsible for the circulation of those ideas (147). This traffic is, Sudan demonstrates, is one through which the appropriation of Indian techne into European Enlightenment occurs.

The Alchemy of Empire, which partially recalled for me Kavita Philip’s Civilizing Natures, is characterized by intellectual rigour and breadth of coverage, of discourses, texts and geographies. While in some cases the connections Sudan forges emerges from imaginative leaps not easy to decipher (for instance between Robert Barker in Calcutta/India, and Benigne Poissenot’s in France/Europe), they provide a way into both material culture and intellectual history of the Empire, European Enlightenment and English identity.  An excellent instance of the transnational turn in studies of imperial histories, as stated at the outset of this review (and part of a pantheon major works as The Postcolonial Enlightenment, The Global Renaissance, Global Romanticism, among others), Sudan demonstrates how English and European identity and the grand European Enlightenment could not have emerged, or perhaps even thought of, without the inputs, legitimately or illegitimately ‘borrowed’, from Indian science and techne. We sail perilously close, of course, to the nativist stance (‘we always had these well before the Europeans’) when we seek native roots and antecedents to everything European, but Sudan makes sure this does not happen by emphasizing cultural transactions (albeit underwritten by imperial ideologies and race) rather than cultural isolates. Work like Sudan’s also recalls Seema Alavi’s Muslim Cosmopolitanism in the Age of Empire, Ulrike Starke’s The Empire of Books and others with their analysis of mutually supportive local (as in native, colonized) networks, scientific, political and theological discourse that competed, contested and sometimes collaborated with European knowledge-making practices and engaged in debates with the latter. The Alchemy of Empire is a useful work to consult for imperial discourse studies, European intellectual history and colonial politics.

Editorial

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  Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.01


Animal studies have advanced in recent years with respect to a more non-anthropocentric approach toward animal rights. Arguments in favor of survival of species and non-intervention have been assiduously made and legitimized. Both animal survival and sustenance are key issues in the current debate on this very special branch of environmentalism. There is a call for preserving the ecosystem. There is a call for maintaining biodiversity for a planet threatened with human activity and the associated climate change that endangers several marine and terrestrial species. Pro-animal sentiments are inspired by environmental awareness and a direct engagement with accumulating data on the changes within our complex ecosystem.

On the other hand there is polemical animal rights activism that has contributed to our awareness of human intervention and cruelty, and the rampant exploitation of animals for human benefit. The historical and culturally entrenched neglect of the moral nature of animals, and their morally tangible behaviors and tendencies has left us ignorant about a whole world of possibilities. A proto-humanist animal care movement was discerned as early as in the anecdotal precepts of Siddhartha in early India, just as Christianity also at times levied this concern for human beings. St. Francis advocated that animals in our care would be led through the gates of heaven after their death.  Of course it is interesting to see how contemporary animal activism has shifted from this old world theological animal care perspective to a radical sense of justice for animals. The reflections on justice in response to the rational perception of the animal body, and the animal entity as a center of feelings, actions and as an entity capable of  socially involved, collective  behavior show that all our existing laws and legends on animals stand in need of revision. Animal slavery has to be recognized as a historical reality. The claims for ecological rights of animals are not enough. We would appreciate a stronger concern for the moral valence of animal behavior, and promote what Thomas Taylor, as early as in 1792, called A Vindication of the Rights of Brutes, in a text published almost contemporaneously with Mary Wollstonecraft’s revolutionary book on women’s equality. Taylor dedicated his book to Thomas Paine, the forerunner of liberty in the new world. Taylor sets the discourse for contemporary animal rights activism at least in so far as he advocates the need to reconsider the true dignity and  moral capacities of other species.

In a sense Taylor’s book anticipates the modern politically engaging discourse on animal rights. It is one of those pioneering studies for today’s  discussions on interspecies engagement. The current issue of Rupkatha deals with several aspects of the animal-human relationship in conventional literature and in related contexts of ecology, biodiversity and animal heritage preservation. Animal studies is placed at the intersection of Science and Arts, like many other interdisciplinary endeavors which now shed light on unknown aspects of nature and existence, and the measures which define our evolving ecosystem.

Perhaps an ambivalence about animal activism still persists with some sections of the academic elite who believe that several questions about the state of things are unresolved and that we do not know how things outside of us are disposed and whether a ‘moral’ animal question were feasible. Every aspect of animal rights issues would have to be raised in any forum dedicated to the question.

~Tirtha Prasad Mukhopadhyay

Art and Science in Franz Marc’s Animal Iconography

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Eleni Gemtou

Professor, Dept. of Philosophy and History of Science, University of Athens, Panepistemioupolis 157 71, Athens, Greece. Email: egemtos@phs.uoa.gr

  Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.02

Received May 24, 2016; Revised July 10, 2016; Accepted July 15, 2016; Published August 18, 2016


Abstract

There has been a theory claiming that innovative artists have always created the appropriate atmosphere for forthcoming scientists to develop important hypotheses about the world. In this paper, the animal iconography of Franz Marc is discussed under the perspective of the achievements of modern ethology and its modified anthropomorphic approaches to animals that seem to have much in common with the empathetic attitudes of Marc, as shown both in his written texts and artworks. The basic argument presented is, however, that despite the interactions between art and science during history, it is of great importance to understand them as discrete rational fields with their own methods and expressive tools.

Keywords: Ethology, Franz Marc, Animal-Iconography, Art and Science

Acknowledgement: Franz Marc, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

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Ethno-Cultural Concept ‘Reindeer Breeding’ in the Even Language

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Ekaterina Afanas’evna Krivoshapkina1 & Svetlana Mitrophanovna Prokopieva2

1Senior lecturer, Department of Northern Philology, North-Eastern Federal University, 677000 Yakutsk, Belinskijstr, 58. Email: e_keimeti@mail.ru. 2Head of the Research-Educational Center Typology of Languages and Cross-Cultural Communication, North-Eastern Federal University, 677000 Yakutsk, Belinskijstr, 58. Email: dsmplana@mail.ru

  Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.03

Received May 16, 2016; August 08, 2016; Accepted August 12, 2016; Published August 18, 2016


Abstract

The paper reveals ethno-cultural value of the concept ‘reindeer breeding’ in denotation formation of the Even language. The work is aimed at an analysis of the ethno-cultural concept of ‘reindeer breeding’ in Even. The investigation is based on lexical units reflecting reindeer characteristics, traditional ways of locational orientation, calendar selected from lexicographic sources of the Even language. The concept ‘reindeer breeding’ has not been subject of special investigation although this very layer of lexical and phraseological units reflects ethno-cultural specifics of the Even language. The analyzed lexical units are subdivided into three groups: 1) vocational vocabulary reflecting general denotations of reindeer, gender-age related reindeer denotations, reindeer color, viscera, reindeer diseases, movements and actions of reindeer, grazing and feeding land, reindeer character and habits; 2) spatial vocabulary (oikonyms, hydronyms, oronyms, toponyms); 3) temporal vocabulary. The study is of complex character; to reveal specific ethnic-cultural features of the linguistic picture of the world we used the inductive-deductive method. The semantic analysis of lexical units involved dictionary definitions of the concept‘reindeer breeding’. Using the component analysis, lexical units were separated into smallest meaningful parts. The research results are of interest for further investigation of other layers of the Even language.

Keywords: concept, the Even, reindeer breeding, toponymy, space, locational orientation.

The “Semiotic Animal” in Roland Barthes: A Reflection on Calculating the Self as “Difference in Man”

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Seema K Ladsaria1 & Rajni Singh2

 1Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT (ISM) Dhanbad. ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3845-7391Email: ism.sima@gmail.com. 2Associate Professor of English, Deptt. of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian School of Mines, Dhanbad, India. ORCID: http://orchid.org/0000-0002-1569-8339. Email: rajnisingh18@gmail.com.

 Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.04

Received May 30, 2016; Revised June 27, 2016; Accepted July 15, 2016; Published August 18, 2016


 Abstract

The animal metaphor in poststructuralists thinkers like Roland Barthes and Jacques Derrida, offers an understanding into the human self through the relational modes of being and co-being. The present study focuses on the concept of “semiotic animal” proposed by John Deely with reference to Roland Barthes. Human beings are often considered as “rational animal” (Descartes) capable of reason and thinking. By analyzing the “semiotic animal” in Roland Barthes, the intention is to study him as a “mind-dependent” being who discovers the contrast between ens reale and ens rationis through his writing. For Barthes “it is the intimate which seeks utterance” in one and makes “it cry, heard, confronting generality, confronting science.” Roland Barthes attempts to read “his body” from the “tissues of signs” that is driven by the unconscious desires. The study is an attempt to explore the semiological underpinnings in Barthes which are found in the form of rhetorical tropes of cats and dogs and the way he relates it with the ‘self’.

Keywords: Semiotic animal, Roland Barthes, rational animal.

Beyond the Humanist Ethics of Vegetarianism: The Carno-Phallogocentric Kernel of Animal Rights Discourses

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Swayamdipta Das

Currently an M.Phil Research Scholar in English Literature at the University of Calcutta. ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8551-5518. Email: swayamdiptadas22@gmail.com.

Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.05

Received May 31, 2016; Revised July 20, 2016; Accepted July 30, 2016; Published August 18, 2016


Abstract

The paper would attempt to dwell into the wider philosophical and ontological implications of vegetarianism and in the process offer a deconstructive critique of the more physicalist currency of vegetarianism advocated by many animal rights activists, philosophers and writers like J.M. Coetzee. Taking up Jacques Derrida’s notion of Anthropocentric “Carno-Phallogocentrism” , the paper would argue how any parochial notion of vegetarianism (including those by J.M. Coetzee in Elizabeth Costello) actually reserves the kernel of a certain anthropomorphic Enlightenment humanism and thus partakes in a kind of epistemic violence upon the animal “other” even while it poses to speak on behalf of them. The trajectory of this paper would take up post-humanist thinkers like Heidegger and Emmanuel Levinas to trace the kernel of anthropocentric humanism even in the positing of the post-cartesian subject and attempt to locate an etymological anthropocentric inheritance of the same in the differential humanism of animal philosophers like J.M. Coetzee.

 

Keywords: Cultural Vegetarianism, Carno-Phallogocentrism, Conditional ethicality, animal rights, post-humanism.

The Mute, the Stoic and the Rebel: Animals in the Works of Mikhail Bulgakov and Nabarun Bhattacharya

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Dibyakusum Ray

 Assistant Professor in the National Institute of Technology, Silchar. ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9537-3277. Email: dibyakusum776@gmail.com.

  Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.06

Received May 30, 2016; Revised July 20, 2016; Accepted July 30, 2016; Published August 18, 2016


Abstract

This article attempts to trace the gradual ‘otherification’ of non-human entity, particularly animals, in Continental theory. This article would also explore how after presupposing the concept of subject as a human, with animals acting as “alive but no more” with no part in making judgments, Continental theory takes a turn. Levinas conceptualizes animals as “delightful” dociles facilitating human self-definition. Conversely, Derrida problematizes the multilayered man-animal/master-pet dialectics, as he points out the systematic exploitation of animals in society and artistic representation, as the animals are expected to be the mute receptacle of human vagaries—the perpetual ‘other’ who do not even speak or gaze back.  Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita and The Heart of a Dog, together with two of Nabarun Bhattacharya’s works would serve as specific case studies to analyze the evolution of animal imagery from meek placebos through stoic indifference into a force of dissent—ever irreconcilable to the ‘self’.

Keywords: animal studies, aesthetics, ethics, Levinas, Derrida, Bulgakov, Nabarun Bhattacharya

Whither with the Will? : A Phenomenological Critique of Free Will, Ethicality and the Idea of the Animal

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Soham Ganguly

MPhil student of the English Department of the University of Calcutta. ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3928-5838. Email: sohamgg007@gmail.com

 Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.07

Received May 29, 2016; Revised July 24, 2016; Accepted July 30, 2016; Published August 18, 2016


Abstract

Free will, which directly pertains to ethical choices, has for long been a point of contention in the spheres of philosophy and the sciences, the latter putting forth chiefly a naturalist account of it, a thinking apparatus which, permeated by evolutionary discourse, privileges the human organism over the non-human by virtue of, among other things, a fundamental epistemic capacity to form conceptions beyond only the ‘first-order’, concerns of the present. In counterpoint to such an account, this paper posits an alternative, phenomenological account of the human subject as well as the body, founded upon spatio-temporality, and examines its ramifications.

 Keywords: phenomenology, temporality, free will, ethicality, animal, naturalism

Planting the Eco-Humanities? Climate Change, Poetic Narratives, and Botanical Lives

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John Charles Ryan

Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of English and Cultural Studies at the University of Western Australia. ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5102-4561. Email: john.c.ryan@uwa.edu.au

  Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.08

Received May 15, 2016; Revised July 10, 2016; Accepted July 10, 2016; Published August 18, 2016


Abstract

This essay offers an initial attempt to think through how some of the ideas emerging from the new field of “critical plant studies” (CPS) can elucidate, deepen, or challenge aspects of climate change discourse. Across the globe, the deleterious impacts of climate change on plants are increasingly documented by scientists. However, despite their fundamental role in the carbon cycle of the biosphere and the disruption of botanical communities in the wake of climate disturbance, plants occupy a marginal position in the narratives told about climate change. This assertion will be explored, substantiated, and expanded more concretely in reference to the “Keep It In the Ground Campaign” curated by the newspaper The Guardian in 2015. The stories circulating in the public imagination about climate change and that provoke debate, action, and reflection can be enhanced through the invigorated understandings of the vegetal world offered by the emerging field of critical plant studies (CPS).

Keywords: Critical Plant Studies, Ecopoetics, Climate Change Narratives, Activism.

Creative Nature of the Ideal in Culture

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Viktor Ivanovich Polishchuk1, Zoya Yanovna Selitskaya2 & Grigory Viktorovich Silchenko3

 1Professor of the Department of Russian and Foreign Philology, Cultural Research and Methods of Teaching Them at Tyumen State University (branch in Ishim). Email: v.i.p.1945@mail.ru. 2Associate Professor of the Chair of Philology and Cultural Studies of the Ishim State Teachers Training Institute. 3Tyumen State University.

 Volume 8, Number 3, 2016 I Full Text PDF

DOI: 10.21659/rupkatha.v8n3.09

Received April 11, 2016; Revised July 07, 2016; Accepted July 10, 2016; Published August 18, 2016


 Abstract

The article deals with the notion of the “ideal”, its correlation with the notions of “idea”, “appearance”, “form”, “image”, “seeing”. The article analyses the contribution to the study made by the Russian philosophers Vladimir Solovyev and Evald Ilyenkov. The authors of the article argue that although they define the ideal differently, both thinkers identify it with the purpose of societal development, culture and history. The article reveals the mutual linkage of such notions as the ideal, the idol and the visibility. The fundamental problem of the discussion lies in determining the source of the ideal. The article uses the rules of deductive and inductive logic, the required analytical procedures, as well as diachronic, comparative-historical, hermeneutic and phenomenological methods. The authors come to the following relevant conclusions: firstly, the ideal has a dual nature, which accounts for a tendency to identify it with the idol; secondly, childhood experience is the essential source of the ideal.

Keywords: culture, history, ideal, structure of ideal, idea, idol, appearance, visibility, creation, propensity for the past.

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