The Mizo Discovery of the British Raj
High in the eastern Himalayan foothills, people had a unique vantage point on the British Empire. The Mizo Discovery of the British Raj presents a history of Mizoram in Northeast India told from historical Indigenous perspectives of encounters with empire from the 1890s to the 1920s. Based on a wide range of research and enriched by sources newly digitised by the author through the British Library's Endangered Archives Programme, Kyle Jackson sheds new light on the complex and violent processes of how and why diverse populations of highland clans in the Indo-Burmese borderlands came to redefine themselves as Christian Mizos. By using historical Indigenous concepts and logics to approach early twentieth-century imperial encounters, Jackson guides readers into a decolonial history of Northeast India, demonstrating the value of thinking not just about the histories of colonized peoples and concepts but also with them.
- Presents a distinct shift in the historiography of the region by using historical Indigenous concepts, perspectives, and logics to retell the story of empire in Northeast India
- Reverses the usual plotlines of imperial history, making highland perspectives central and familiar
- Speaks to themes of current interest, notably in its decolonial methodology and integration of environmental history
Product details
November 2023Hardback
9781009267342
300 pages
235 × 157 × 22 mm
0.56kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Illustrations
- Maps
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1. Coming into View: Trade, Violence, Coercion (1870–1899)
- 2: Reading the Forest: Roads, Animals, Converts (1891–1912)
- 3 Adopting the Missionary: Messages, Commodities, Technologies (1894–1908)
- 4. Sensing the Mission: Hearing, Tasting, Harhna (1910s)
- 5. Crisis and Conversion: Bamboo, Debt, Disease (1906–1924)
- Conclusion
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Acknowledgments
- Index.