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ID178164
Title ProperAmerican Modernisers and the Cow Question in Colonial and Nationalist India
LanguageENG
AuthorKumar, Prakash
Summary / Abstract (Note)The cattle modernisation sought by American missionaries in colonial North India advanced a productivist argument around the efficiency of cattle and their contribution to agriculture. On the face of it, by criticising the excessive supply of cattle in North India, this position went against the core preservationist concerns of the cow protectionists. But in reality, these modernisers struck a range of correlations with colonial and nationalist positions on the management of livestock and, ironically, even some limited space with the cow protectionists in treating India’s cattle as productive beings that were beneficial to the nation. These American prescriptions were stable constructs that became visible once again in the American food aid apparatus in India after Independence and shared overlapping concerns with ongoing cattle productivity debates in India. This paper illuminates the overlaps between the advocacy of the multiple constituents and a recurrence of certain patterns of contestation that were constitutive of the very paradigm of agrarian modernisation.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 44, No.1; Feb 2021: p.185-200
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2021-02 44, 1
Key WordsModernisation ;  Agricultural Production ;  Food Aid ;  Animal Husbandry ;  Cattle Breeding ;  Pests ;  US–India Relations