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Imperial Fault Lines - Christianity and Colonial Power in India, 1818-1940 (Hardcover)
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Imperial Fault Lines - Christianity and Colonial Power in India, 1818-1940 (Hardcover)
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"Imperial Fault Lines" tells the history of Christian missionary
encounters with non-Christians in a part of the world where there
were no Christians at all until the advent of British imperial rule
in the early nineteenth century. As British and American
missionaries spread out from Delhi into the heartland of Punjab,
their preconceived ideas about Hinduism and Islam broke down
rapidly as they established institutions requiring the close
cooperation of Indians. Two-thirds of the foreign missionaries who
entered the Punjab were women, and issues of gender as well as race
were central dilemmas in a cultural encounter that featured
numerous irresolvable conflicts. The missionaries' commitment to
Christian universalism clashed with the visible realities of their
imperial privileges. Although determined to build multiracial
institutions based on spiritual equality, missionaries were the
beneficiaries of an imperial racial hierarchy. Their social
encounters with Indians were exceedingly complex, involving
intimacy and affection as well as affronts and betrayals.
Missionaries were compelled to react to circumstances not of their
own making, and were forced to negotiate and compromise with Indian
Christians, government officials, Indian critics of the missionary
movement, and the many non-Christian students, patients, and staff
at large and influential missionary schools, colleges, and
hospitals. In villages, university-educated clergymen who had hoped
to convert the Hindu and Muslim elite found themselves in the
surprising position of advocating the rights of stigmatized and
oppressed rural laborers. The history of elite institution-building
took surprising turns during the rise of the national movement, as
missionaries struggled with the conflict between their own
transparent entanglement with imperialism and their attempts to
foster new forms of indigenous Christianity that would outlive
British imperial rule.
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