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ID121948
Title ProperDevotion, antiquity, and colonial custody of the Hindu temple in British India
LanguageENG
AuthorSutton, Deborah
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In 1904, the British Indian government passed the Ancient Monuments Protection Act and, in doing so, radically enlarged the state's bureaucratic claim to structures defined, for the purposes of the Act, as monuments. The project of conserving the Hindu temple was beset by disagreements. The claims of the colonial state and local Hindu devotees were separated by different precepts about religiosity and alternate orders of aesthetics, time, and history. However, it is clear that there were also confluences: legislative authority could masquerade as custody of the antiquarian and, in practice, the secular veneration of material antiquity blurred with Hindu divinity. This paper combines an exploration of the principles of archaeological conservation, as they were formed in the European bourgeois imagination, and then traces their transfer, though imperial administration, to case-studies of specific temples. Of particular interest is the deployment of the Act by local administrations and the counter-challenges, appropriations, and manipulations of the same legislation. How were the aesthetic codes of conservation-and the legislation that sought to order and enforce their introduction-compromised by religious claims and practices?
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 47, No.1; Jan 2013: p.135-166
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 47, No.1; Jan 2013: p.135-166
Key WordsBritish India ;  Ancient Monuments Protection Act ;  Hindu Temple ;  Colonial State ;  Hindu Devotees