This book examines the social, political and ideological
dimensions of the encounter between the indigenous inhabitants of
the Andaman islands, British colonizers and Indian settlers in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The British-Indian penal
settlements in the Andaman Islands beginning tentatively in 1789
and renewed on a larger scale in 1858 represent an extensive,
complex experiment in the management of populations through
colonial discourses of race, criminality, civilization, and
savagery. Focussing on the ubiquitous characterization of the
Andaman islanders as savages, this study explores the particular
relationship between savagery and the practice of colonialism.
Satadru Sen examines savagery and the savage as dynamic
components of colonialism in South Asia: not intellectual
abstractions with clear and fixed meanings, but politically alive
and fiercely contested products of the colony. Illuminating and
historicizing the processes by which the discourse of savagery goes
through multiple and fundamental shifts between the late eighteenth
and late nineteenth centuries, he shows the links and breaks
between these shifts and changing ideas of race, adulthood and
masculinity in the Andamans, British India, Britain and in the
wider empire. He also highlights the implications of these changes
for the savages themselves. At the broadest level, this book
re-examines the relationship between the modern and the primitive
in a colonial world."
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