Although the filmmaker Satyajit Ray is well-known across the world, few outside Bengal know much about the diverse contributions of his forebears to printing technology, nationalism, childrens literature, feminism, advertising, entreprenurial culture and religious reform. Even within Bengal, the earlier Rays are often regarded exclusively as childrens writers. The first study in English of the multifarious interests and accomplishments of the Ray family and its collateral branches, The Rays Before Satyajit interweaves the Ray saga with the larger history of Indian modernity and its contradictions. Whilst eager to learn from the West and rarely drawn to simple-minded nationalism, the Rays, at their best, shunned mere imitation and sought to create forms of the modern that were thoroughly Indian and enthusiastically cosmopolitan. Some of the outcomes of this quest such as Upendrakishore Rays innovations in half-tone photography were even appreciated in the West, though the metropolitan careers of colonial innovators, as the book shows, were inevitably constrained by forces beyond their control. Ranging confidently across the history of religion, literature, science, technology and entrepreneurial culture, The Rays before Satyajit is not only a collective biography of an extraordinary family but illuminates the history of Indian modernity from a bracingly original perspective.
About the AuthorChandak Sengoopta is Professor of History at Birkbeck College, University of London, UK
ReviewsThe most salient features of this well-researched book include its lucid language and detailed notes at the end of every chapter. This study makes an extremely important contribution as an alternate history of the anti-colonial movement and is also a timely intervention in research pertaining to post-colonialism...Sengoopta's book is...a very important study illustrating the rich legacy of 'The Rays before Satyajit', indeed a fitting title. * Devapriya Sanyal, Hindu College, University of Delhi, South Asia Research *
Book InformationISBN 9780199464753
Author Chandak SengooptaFormat Hardback
Page Count 426
Imprint OUP IndiaPublisher OUP India
Weight(grams) 616g
Dimensions(mm) 223mm * 147mm * 31mm