“Masters” and “Natives” : : Digging the Others’ Past / / ed. by Philippe Bornet, Michel E. Fuchs, Claude Rapin, Svetlana Gorshenina.

The book focuses on the relational dynamic between “masters” and “natives” in the construction of scholarly narratives about the past, in the fields of archeology, history or the study of religions. Reconsidering the role of subaltern actors that recent postcolonial studies have tended to ignore, th...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Asian Studies Contemporary Collection eBook Package
MitwirkendeR:
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Berlin ;, Boston : : De Gruyter, , [2019]
©2019
Year of Publication:2019
Language:English
Series:Welten Süd- und Zentralasiens / Worlds of South and Inner Asia / Mondes de l'Asie du Sud et de l'Asie Centrale : Im Auftrag der Schweizerischen Asiengesellschaft / On behalf of the Swiss Asia Society / Au nom de la Société Suisse-Asie , 8
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Physical Description:1 online resource (XI, 383 p.)
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Acknowledgements
  • Contents
  • Note on Transliteration
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Archaeology in the Time of Empires: Unequal Negotiations and Scientific Competition
  • “Masters” Against “Natives”: Edward Daniel Clarke and the “Theft” of the Eleusinian “Goddess”
  • Russian Archaeologists, Colonial Administrators, and the “Natives” of Turkestan: Revisiting the History of Archaeology in Central Asia
  • The “Maîtres” of Archaeology in Eastern Turkestan: Divide et Impera
  • “Master” / “Native”: Are There Winners? A Micro-History of Reciprocal and Non-Linear Relations
  • Subverting the “Master”–“Native” Relationship: Dragomans and Their Clients in the Fin-de-Siècle Middle East
  • In the Service of the Colonizer: Leon Barszczewski, Polish Officer in the Tsarist Army
  • “The General and his Army”: Metropolitans and Locals on the Khorezmian Expedition
  • Taming the Other’s Past: The Eurocentric Scientific Tools
  • From the Emic to the Etic and Back Again: Archaeology, Orientalism, and Religion from Colonial Sri Lanka to Switzerland
  • Legislation and the Study of the Past: The Archaeological Survey of India and Challenges of the Present
  • Early Archaeology in a “Native State”: Khans, Officers, and Archaeologists in Swat (1895–1939), with a Digression on the 1950s
  • The Forging of Myths: Heroic Clichés and the (Re-)Distribution of Roles
  • Archaeologists in Soviet Literature
  • Archaeology and the Archaeologist on Screen
  • Reversal of Roles in Postcolonial and Neocolonial Contexts: From a Relation between “Masters” and “Subordinates” to “Partnership”?
  • From Supervision to Independence in Archaeology: The Comparison of the Iranian and the Afghan Strategy
  • The Postcolonial Rewriting of the Past in North and South Korea Following Independence (1950s–1960s)
  • Excavating in Iran and Central Asia: Cooperation or Competition?
  • Publishing an Archaeological Discovery astride the “North”–“South” Divide (On an Example from Central Asia)
  • Role Reversal: Hindu “Ethno-Expertise” of Western Archaeological Materials