Indian Traces in Oxford

By Oxford University

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Category: Education

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Episodes: 7

Description

Indian Traces in Oxford was an exhibition mounted in collaboration with the Bodleian Library, showcasing the remarkably wide range of textual and photographic traces or leavings of Indian students, activists, politicians, artists and others in the Bodleian special collections and College libraries, in the period 1870-1950. The exhibition opened with a half-day workshop, on 1 March 2010, in Convocation House, to be introduced by the acclaimed Indian novelist – and Oxford alumnus – Amitav Ghosh.\r\n\r\nIndian Traces at Oxford focuses in close detail on Indians' impact on Oxford University’s life and culture. Both the exhibition and the 1 March workshop considers the value and meaning of manuscript traces, how they reflect on the ways in which Indians and Britons interacted in the period, and how we are able to imagine the lives of these early Indian travellers to Oxford into these textual tracks and marks.

Episode Date
Cornelia Sorabji: Jowett's protégée in Oxford 1889-1893
Mar 03, 2010
Repainting Ajanta: the global impact of the Frescoes and their copies
Mar 03, 2010
Tracing Indian students at Oxford before the Second World War
Mar 02, 2010
Indian imperial crossings and the Oxford hub
Mar 02, 2010
Michael Madhusudan Datta (1824-1873): a young Bengali poet's exam script washes up on Albion's distant shore
Mar 02, 2010
Musings of Sir Mohammad Iqbal on the Place of Muslims in late Colonial India: Letters to Edward John Thompson, 1933-1934
Mar 02, 2010
Introduction and Reading
Mar 02, 2010