Most scholars who study the Indian subcontinent during the colonial era focus on relations between the British rulers and their South Asian subjects. Dr. Kris Manjapram, a Diverse 2015 Emerging Scholar, has instead concentrated on interactions between German intellectuals and their South Asian peers.
“My interest is in the study of colonialism and how it brings together different communities on a global scale,” explains Manjapra, a tenured associate professor of history at Tufts University.
“I’m interested in the forms of migrations, of exchange, of racialization and exploitation that come out of a modern colonial regime.”
In his 2014 book, “Age of Entanglement: German and Indian Intellectuals across Empire,” Manjapra reveals and explores two-way exchanges between colonial subjects of the British and citizens of another European country. Between the 1880s and 1940s, nationalist members of both groups found they had a common interest in challenging the British Empire’s dominance.
After World War I, the nationalist leader of Calcutta University sent young academics to Germany to study the sciences, Manjapra says. They returned to India as top-notch scientists and established academic departments based on the German model.
Ideas flowed in the other direction, too.
Manjapra says Indian nationalists visited Germany, including Rabindranath Tagore, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. He gave lectures and read his poetry to German audiences.