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Projit Bihari Mukharji

    Brown Skins, White Coats
    Nationalizing the Body
    • Nationalizing the Body

      The Medical Market, Print and Daktari Medicine

      • 368 Seiten
      • 13 Lesestunden
      4,0(4)Abgeben

      Focusing on colonial South Asia, the book delves into the various interpretations of "modern medicine" and the discourses surrounding "modernity." It investigates how these concepts were shaped by colonial influences and the implications they had on societal perceptions of health and identity during that period.

      Nationalizing the Body
    • A unique narrative structure brings the history of race science in mid-twentieth-century India to vivid life.There has been a recent explosion in studies of race science in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, but most have focused either on Europe or on North America and Australia. In this stirring history, Projit Bihari Mukharji illustrates how India appropriated and repurposed race science to its own ends and argues that these appropriations need to be understood within the national and regional contexts of postcolonial nation-making—not merely as footnotes to a Western history of “normal science.”The book comprises seven factual chapters operating at distinct levels—conceptual, practical, and cosmological—and eight fictive interchapters, a series of epistolary exchanges between the Bengali author Hemendrakumar Ray (1888–1963) and the protagonist of his dystopian science fiction novel about race, race science, racial improvement, and dehumanization. In this way, Mukharji fills out the historical moment in which the factual narrative unfolded, vividly revealing its moral, affective, political, and intellectual fissures.

      Brown Skins, White Coats