SAST Colloquium: J. Barton Scott

The Negro Our Aryan Brother: Race, Caste, and Hindu Cosmo-Nationalism in the Transcolonial 1920s

402 Cohen Hall
249 S. 36th Street

Featuring J. Barton Scott, Professor, University of Toronto

This talk explores the entangled genealogies of modern concepts of race, caste, and religion by exploring a very particular—and unexpected—microhistory. In 1925, the Arya Samaj missionary Pandit Chamupati went on a mission tour of British East Africa to avoid a scandal brewing in Lahore around an anti-Muslim tract he had anonymously authored. Based in Nairobi, Chamupati stayed in East Africa for around one year and published several essays about his trip, including the Vedic Magazine article “The Negro Our Aryan Brother.” By arguing that East Africans were long-lost Vedic Aryans, Chamupati extended the scope of the “Aryan” body in an unusual way. He also linked Aryanism, as a transcolonial formation of race, caste, and religion, to an emergent notion of a neo-Vedic empire that was itself unstable, founded on constitutive contradictions.

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