7 research outputs found
Missionary education, knowledge and North India society, C. 1880-1915'
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Missionary education, knowledge and north Indian society, c. 1880-1915
This dissertation is a critical examination of education via what I have termed the
'educational enterprise' run by Anglican Christian missions in north India c.1880-1915. It
will focus in particular on the Gangetic plain, parts of Bengal, the Punjab and Central
Provinces. The example of the United Provinces will be used to give context to missionary-
Government relations, but will engage with arguments in upper and eastern India (especially
Bengal) which are relevant to this research. The network of schools, their aims, orientation,
and the degrees to which they were dependent upon Indian agency will all be considered.
The first chapter begins with a review of the literature on colonial knowledge and Christian
missions, and gives a brief review of religious debate and discourse in pre-British India. It
then establishes the Protestant Christian theological context of the early-mid nineteenth
century and delineates its development from a pugnacious confrontational one into a
positivist and universal theology towards the late nineteenth century. Chapter II establishes
the moral and economic context of education in late nineteenth century UP, accounting for
religious instruction, the economic rationale for subsidising mission schools, the relationship
between the two. It will further define the relationship between missions and Government.
Chapter III defines the means and ends of mission schools, considers the degree to which
they were dependent upon Indian agency and the impact of religious dialogue upon
'representations' of India. The reception and contestation of both religious and secular
knowledge are dealt with in Chapter IV. Indian contestations of Orientalist and
Christocentric scholarship receive particular attention. The development of a secular and
religiously-plural educational sphere, as a by-product of missionary education, will be
investigated in Chapter V. It considers the devaluation of the curriculum, investigates student
hostels, Indian nationalism and their contribution to constructive nationalism. The
infrastructural shortcomings of education will be addressed in Chapter VI, and ascertain the
degree to which the enterprise reproduced Indian, European, and Christian values. Chapter
VII will conclude with a review and offer insights into the relationships between
Orientalism, religion and colonial Indian society