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by C. A. Bayly and D. H. A. Kolff The papers published in this
volume were originally presented at two meetings of the Cambridg
-Leiden group for the comparative study of colonial India and
Indonesia he1d in June 1979 and September 1982. These meetings were
jointly sponsored by the Centre for the History of European
Expansion at Leiden and the Centre for South Asian Studies at
Cambridge. The Cambridge Centre had been restricted to the study of
India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Burma and Nepal but had recently
incorporated Southeast Asia into its area of interest; the Leiden
Centre, which had encouraged comparative study from the beginning,
necessarily found itself concentrating attention on Indonesias as
the most important region of the former Dutch colonial empire. The
meetings were intended to be exploratory, as much to alert the
participants to work being done in the respective countries and to
their different types of academic discourse as to compare 'India'
and 'Indonesia'. Nor were the meetings intended to be exclusive.
Scholars from several British and Netherlands Universities were
involved from the beginning. More recently a wider series of
conferences has been inaugurated. This brings scholars in India and
Indonesia into a project wich seeks to develop the comparisons
between the * two colonial societies on a more systematic basis.
by C. A. Bayly and D. H. A. Kolff The papers published in this
volume were originally presented at two meetings of the Cambridg
-Leiden group for the comparative study of colonial India and
Indonesia he1d in June 1979 and September 1982. These meetings were
jointly sponsored by the Centre for the History of European
Expansion at Leiden and the Centre for South Asian Studies at
Cambridge. The Cambridge Centre had been restricted to the study of
India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Burma and Nepal but had recently
incorporated Southeast Asia into its area of interest; the Leiden
Centre, which had encouraged comparative study from the beginning,
necessarily found itself concentrating attention on Indonesias as
the most important region of the former Dutch colonial empire. The
meetings were intended to be exploratory, as much to alert the
participants to work being done in the respective countries and to
their different types of academic discourse as to compare 'India'
and 'Indonesia'. Nor were the meetings intended to be exclusive.
Scholars from several British and Netherlands Universities were
involved from the beginning. More recently a wider series of
conferences has been inaugurated. This brings scholars in India and
Indonesia into a project wich seeks to develop the comparisons
between the * two colonial societies on a more systematic basis.
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