Mapping a Colonial Borderland: Objectifying the Geo-Body of India's Northeast


Autoria(s): Kumar, M. Satish; Zou, David Vumlallian
Data(s)

01/02/2011

Resumo

India’s Northeast frontier is at the margins of three study areas: South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Asia. This paper attempts a history of “mapping” in its broader sense as a cultural universal over a relatively long period. It is not a history of cartography, but focuses on the interface between cartography and cosmography, which were, in turn, shaped by imperial power and geographical knowledge. This approach offers a high-altitude view of this Asian borderland as the imperial frontier of both the Mughals and the British, and the national fringe of Republican India. The authors argue that imperial geographical discourses invested the colonial Northeast (British Assam) with a new kind of territorial identity. Surveyors and mapmakers objectified the “geo-body” of this borderland in a spatial fix and visualized it as a Northeast-on-the-map. Cartographic territoriality naturalized traditional frontiers into colonial borderlands, which, in turn, forged national boundaries.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/mapping-a-colonial-borderland-objectifying-the-geobody-of-indias-northeast(9bfdff77-4633-453c-a902-d6a0f0c2cb91).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0021911810002986

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Kumar , M S & Zou , D V 2011 , ' Mapping a Colonial Borderland: Objectifying the Geo-Body of India's Northeast ' The Journal of Asian Studies , vol 70 , no. 1 , pp. 141-170 . DOI: 10.1017/S0021911810002986

Tipo

article