The Circulation of Knowledge Between Britain, India and China: The Early-Modern World to the Twentieth Century: 3

The Circulation of Knowledge Between Britain, India and China: The Early-Modern World to the Twentieth Century: 3 book cover

The Circulation of Knowledge Between Britain, India and China: The Early-Modern World to the Twentieth Century: 3

Author(s): Bernard Lightman (Editor), Gordon McOuat (Editor), Larry Stewart (Editor)

  • Publisher: Brill
  • Publication Date: 21 Jun. 2013
  • Edition: Illustrated
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 364 pages
  • ISBN-10: 9004244417
  • ISBN-13: 9789004244412

Book Description

In The Circulation of Knowledge Between Britain, India and China, twelve scholars examine how knowledge, things and people moved within, and between, the East and the West from the early modern period to the twentieth century. The collection starts by looking at the ways and means that knowledge circulated, first in Europe, but then beyond to India and China. It engages the knowledge and encounters of those Europeans as they moved across the globe. It participates in the attempt to open up more nuanced and balanced trajectories of colonial and post-colonial encounters. By focusing on exchange, translation, and resistance, the authors bring into the spotlight many “bit-players” and things originally relegated to the margins in the development of late modern science.

Contributors include Karen Smith, Larry Stewart, Savrithri Preetha Nair, Jan Golinski, Arun Bala, Jonathan Topham, Khyati Nagar, Yang Haiyan, Fa-ti Fan, Grace Yen Shen, Jahnavi Phalkey, Veena Rao, and Sundar Sarukkai.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Bernard Lightman, Ph.D. (1979), Brandeis University, is Professor Humanities at York University. Current editor of Isis, his major publications include Origins of Agnosticism (Johns Hopkins, 1987), Victorian Science in Context (Chicago, 1997), and Victorian Popularizers of Science (Chicago, 2007).

Gordon McOuat, PhD 1996, University of Toronto, is Professor of History of Science, University of King’s College. Currently the Director of “Situating Science: Canadian National Cluster for the Humanities and Social Studies of Science”, he has published The Origins of Natural Kinds (2009), Descartes and the Modern (Cambridge Scholars, 2008), Bentham’s Logic (2008), amongst others.

Larry Stewart, Ph.D. (1978), University of Toronto, is Professor of History at the University of Saskatchwan. He has published numerous articles on 18th century science, The Rise of Public Science (Cambridge, 1992) and, with Margaret Jacob, Practical Matter. Newton’s Science in the Service of Industry and Empire, 1687-1851 (Harvard, 2004).

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