Needham's Indian Network: The Search for a Home for the History of Science in India (1950–1970)

Volume 14, Issue 2

In Needham's Indian Network: The Search for a Home for the History of Science in India (1950-1970), Dhruv Raina traces the long-range networks that institutionalized the disciplinary history of science in India soon after its independence in 1947. Using primarily archival materials deposited at the Needham Research Institute, Raina shows that Joseph Needham (1900-95) the famous Cambridge biochemist, Sinologist, and inaugurator of the ongoing Science and Civilisation in China series-_was a constant source of inspiration and a frequent interlocutor for a generation of Indian historians and philosophers. These included Damodar Dharmanada (D. D.) Kosambi (1907-66), Debiprasad Chattopadhyaya (1918-93), Abdur Rahman (1923-2009), and Irfan Habib (1931-), among others. They sought Needham's advice on building academic communities and infrastructure for the history of science in India, con versed at length with Needham in person or through decades-long correspondence on comparative issues, and produced voluminous scholarship that critically engaged with Needham's methodologies. This slim and elegant volume is essential reading for researchers interested in cross-cultural histories of science and historiography of South Asia.

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