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CONTESTING TRANSLATIONS: ORIENTALISM AND THE INTERPRETATION OF THE VEDAS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2007

MICHAEL S. DODSON
Affiliation:
Indiana University, Bloomington

Abstract

This essay examines the contested grounds of authorization for one important orientalist project in India during the nineteenth century – the translation of the ancient Sanskrit Ṛg Veda, with a view to highlighting the ultimately ambiguous nature of the orientalist enterprise. It is argued that Europeans initially sought to validate their translations by adhering to Indian scholarly practices and, in later decades, to a more “scientific” orientalist–philological practice. Indian Sanskrit scholars, however, rather than accepting such translations of the Veda, and the cultural characterizations they contained, instead engaged critically with them, reproducing a distinctive vision of Indian civilization through their own translations into English. Moreover, by examining the diverse ways in which key concepts, such as the “fidelity” of a translation, were negotiated by Europeans and Indians, this essay also suggests that intellectual histories of the colonial encounter in South Asia should move beyond debates about colonial knowledge to more explicitly examine the contexts of knowledgeable practices.

Type
Articles
Copyright
2007 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

My thanks to Eivind Kahrs for his comments on this essay, as well as C. A. Bayly, Shruti Kapila, Nick Phillipson, Jon Wilson, Andrew Sartori, Faisal Devji, and the other participants at the New History of Ideas for India workshop held at the Centre for History and Economics, King's College, Cambridge, on 25 July 2006.