Academic Lecture Series - Between the Colonial and the Postcolonial: Indian Science, the U.S. Military-Industrial Complex, and the Creation of INSAT - Queens Campus

February 21, 2013 1:50 PM - 3:15 PM
DAC Rm. 206, Queens Campus

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Title: Between the Colonial and the Postcolonial: Indian Science, the U.S. Military-Industrial Complex, and the Creation of INSAT

Abstract:
During the 1960s and early 1970s, an elite group of Indian physicists established the basic institutional foundations of a domestic Indian space program. The nascent “space” community employed three rhetorical strategies to couch the effort to the public, both as a way to insulate the effort from criticism and as a means to differentiate it from the major Cold War space programs of the Soviet Union and the United States. These characterizations of the program—the principle of self-reliance, the potential economic benefits to India’s poor, and the peaceful nature of the effort—have remained inextricably linked to any public discussion of the Indian space program. In practice, the Indian space program embodied distinct counter currents to its constructed public identity. In the early period, India benefited significantly from foreign partners as a result of deliberate policy initiatives inseparable from broader Cold War concerns. Dr. Siddiqi examines this critical phase in the early development of the Indian space program, when the professional aspirations of a rising scientific elite in India came into conflict with foreign policy imperatives related to the Cold War, and nationalistic rhetoric that privileged the specificities of the post-colonial context.

Bio:
Dr. Asif Siddiqi is a professor in the history of science and technology at Fordham University. His most recent book was The Red Rockets' Glare: Spaceflight and the Soviet Imagination, 1857-1957 (Cambridge, 2010). He is currently working on a book on technological systems in the post-colonial context.

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Date: Thursday, February 21st, 2013
Time: 1:50 PM - 3:15 PM
Location: DAC Rm. 206, Queens Campus

More Information
Susan Schmidt Horning
schmidts@stjohns.edu