ABSTRACT

By presenting a new interpretation of Rabindranath Tagore’s English language writings, this book places the work of India’s greatest Nobel Prize winner and cultural icon in the context of imperial history and thereby bridges the gap between Tagore studies and imperial/postcolonial historiography.

Using detailed archival research, the book charts the origins of Tagore’s ideas in Indian religious traditions and discusses the impact of early Indian nationalism on Tagore’s thinking. It offers a new interpretation of Tagore’s complex debates with Gandhi about the colonial encounter, Tagore’s provocative analysis of the impact of British imperialism in India and his questioning of nationalism as a pathway to authentic postcolonial freedom. The book also demonstrates how the man and his ideas were received and interpreted in Britain during his lifetime and how they have been sometimes misrepresented by nationalist historians and postcolonial theorists after Tagore’s death.

An alternative interpretation based on an intellectual history approach, this book places Tagore’s sense of agency, his ideas and intentions within a broader historical framework. Offering an exciting critique of postcolonial theory from a historical perspective, it is a timely contribution in the wake of the 150th anniversary of Tagore's birth in 2011.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

Tagore, Imperialism and a Global Intellectual History

part |76 pages

Ideas and Intentions

chapter |23 pages

Religion and Reform

Tagore's Nineteenth-Century Inheritance

chapter |22 pages

England and the Nobel Prize

Tagore at Home in the World

chapter |29 pages

On Nations and Empires

Tagore's Debates with M. K. Gandhi

part |62 pages

Colonial and Postcolonial Encounters

chapter |21 pages

Cross-Purposes

Tagore, W. B. Yeats and ‘Irish Orientalism'

chapter |22 pages

Acts of Atonement

Tagore, C. F. Andrews and E. J. Thompson

chapter |17 pages

Rabindranath Redux

Tagore and the Postcolonial World