Science, Technology, and Society Seminar: STS Circle at Harvard (In Person)

Date: 

Monday, October 17, 2022, 12:15pm to 2:00pm

Location: 

CGIS South, 1730 Cambridge Street, Thomas Chan-Soo Kang Room (S050)

"Racial Segregation and Colonial Self-Government: South Africa and British India, 1900–35"

Speaker:

Aniket De, Graduate Student Affiliate; Graduate Research Fellow, Canada Program. PhD Candidate, Department of History, Harvard University.

Contact:

Sam Evans
samuel_evans@harvard.edu

Cosponsored by the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Abstract:

The age of national self-determination, which conventionally establishes the system of post-imperial nation-states, begins with the founding of the League of Nations after the First World War. The development of self-government in British India in 1919 — particularly the principle of “dyarchy” or dual government run jointly by Indians and the British — is thought to be a progressive, if inadequate, measure in this era of self-determination. But it has not been noticed that the same imperial officials who formulated dyarchy had previously segregated and disenfranchised non-whites in South Africa. This paper will analyze how techniques of racial segregation were incorporated into structures of colonial self-government in a moment of imperial reconstruction after the War. Examining the ideas and careers of South African administrators who later shaped Indian dyarchy—members of the “Round Table” group like Lionel Curtis, Philip Kerr, and Howard Pim — I aim to show that self-government in India was not a step towards freedom, but a form of racialized rule designed to keep “natives” out of power. The making of this form of self-government in the early twentieth century framed a key moment of crisis in the imperial order, when the weakening of imperial structures due to the War led to increasingly strong anticolonial movements across Asia and Africa. Dyarchy, devised as a strategy to counter this crisis, characterized not only the last phase of European imperialism but also the structure of the post-colonial state. By tracing a hitherto unexplored genealogy of Indian self-government in relation to segregation in South Africa, I therefore hope to reexamine both the origins of colonial self-determination and its subsequent legacies in post-colonial states. Methodologically, the project attempts to bring together the global histories of self-determination and racial segregation, which have tended so far to run on parallel tracks.

Bio:

Aniket De is a PhD Candidate in History at Harvard University

Lunch is provided if you RSVP via our online form by close of business on Thursday, October 13:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe740BnzDfThwCzp-6O57xfGnW4bRbX3GZFogeVzjHXyPV6Kw/viewform