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E-raamat: Slandering the Sacred: Blasphemy Law and Religious Affect in Colonial India

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"Although blasphemy is as old as religion itself, its history has begun a new chapter in recent years. Slanders of the sacred are everywhere, as in the highly visible Charlie Hebdo case, with "religion" sometimes appearing as little more than a membrane for giving and receiving offense. Where some explain the contemporary preoccupation with blasphemy by pointing to the interconnectedness of twenty-first-century media, J. Barton Scott argues that we need to look deeper into the past at the colonial-era infrastructures that continue to shape our globalized world. Slandering the Sacred examines one such powerful and widely influential legal infrastructure: Section 295A of the Indian Penal Code. What would it look like to take Section 295A as a text in, of, and for religion-a connective tissue interlinking multiple religious worlds? To answer this question, Scott explores the cultural, intellectual, and legal pre-history of this law, moving between colonial India and imperial Britain as well as between secular law and modern religion. Section 295A reveals a set of problems with no easy solution. It places a chill on free speech, extends the power of the state over civil society, and exacerbates the culture of religious controversy that it was designed to fix. The legislators who enacted the law foresaw the damage it could do and they enacted it anyway, as a half-despairing measure to curb injurious speech. Their problems are still our problems. The twenty-first century has compounded modernity's free-speech headache. Section 295A opens a useful window onto these problems precisely because it is a problem, too. Its history is a tale about the afterlives of the holy dead, the legal definition of the anglophone category "religion," and the transmissibility of outrage as bureaucratized affect"--

A history of global secularism and political feeling through colonial blasphemy law.
 
Why is religion today so often associated with giving and taking offense? To answer this question, Slandering the Sacred invites us to consider how colonial infrastructures shaped our globalized world. Through the origin and afterlives of a 1927 British imperial law (Section 295A of the Indian Penal Code), J. Barton Scott weaves a globe-trotting narrative about secularism, empire, insult, and outrage. Decentering white martyrs to free thought, his story calls for new histories of blasphemy that return these thinkers to their imperial context, dismantle the cultural boundaries of the West, and transgress the borders between the secular and the sacred as well as the public and the private.

Arvustused

A landmark study in the field of religion and South Asia, taking the specific case study of Section 295-A of the Indian Penal Code, which prohibits deliberate harm or injury to religious feelings of a community, to raise and address larger and immensely consequential questions connected to the interaction of law, religion, and secular power in India and beyond. A multifaceted intellectual history cum literary analysis of blasphemy law, Slandering the Sacred moves between nineteenth-century and contemporary Britain and India to show that colonial discourses and conceptions of blasphemy were shaped and indebted to the life of this category as it operated among the colonized religious communities of India." * Marginalia Review of Books * "Scott illuminates the intricate interplay between colonial governance, religious sentiment, and legal frameworks by meticulously tracing the historical trajectory of blasphemy laws in India . . . The book highlights the need to move beyond the simplistic binaries of free speech and blasphemy to understand the complex interplay between law, culture, and religious sentiments in a globalized world." * Religious Studies Review * Slandering the Sacred offers a gripping voyeuristic account of the sinuous ways in which laws religion and religions law together conspired in the racist and sentimental effort to regulate speech and affect in colonial India, particularly in the strange career of Thomas Macaulay. -- Winnifred Fallers Sullivan, Indiana University By rerouting the modern history of blasphemy through late colonial India, this elegant and imaginative book returns empire to the history of secularism as it centers India in the reconception of blasphemy as a secular crime. This richly textured history with many twists and turns is a must-read that cuts through the logjam of contemporary debates about religion and free speech. -- Mrinalini Sinha, University of Michigan In this discerning study, Scott recasts South Asia as a major crucible of key ideas about blasphemy that crystallized under British colonial rule. By linking blasphemy laws with secularization in the metropole and colony, he astutely shows that religious offense often obscured the residual violence in state and society. As Scott skillfully argues, laws putative management of public feelings provided an alibi for solidifying colonialisms grip on civil society, spilling over into the postcolonial states mediation of religious differences. -- Gauri Viswanathan, Columbia University Scott has written a book as witty as it is scholarly. Slandering the Sacred is an enthralling and colorful history of a law, a page-turner about a penal code: this is an impressive feat.". -- Katherine Lemons, McGill University

1 Introduction: Secularizing Blasphemy
1(30)
PART ONE THE MERRY PROPHET
31(46)
2 A Crisis of the Public: The Rajpal Affair and Its Bodies
33(21)
3 Secularism, High and Low: Making the Blasphemy Bill
54(23)
PART TWO BLASPHEMY'S EMPIRE
77(60)
4 Codifying Blasphemy: "Religious Feelings" between Colony and Metropole
79(26)
5 Macaulay Unmanned, or, Tom Governs His Feelings
105(18)
6 Libeling Religion: Secularism and the Intimacy of Insult
123(14)
PART THREE POLEMICS AS ETHICS
137(94)
7 Printing Pain, Ruling Sentiment: A Brief History of Arya Insult
141(25)
8 The Arya Penal Code: Law and the Practice of Documentary Religion
166(19)
9 The Swami and the Prophet: Slandering Lives, Conducting Character
185(31)
10 Conclusion: A Feeling for "Religion"
216(15)
Acknowledgments 231(4)
Notes 235(52)
Index 287
J. Barton Scott is associate professor of historical studies and the study of religion at the University of Toronto. He is author of Spiritual Despots: Modern Hinduism and the Genealogies of Self-Rule, also published by the University of Chicago Press.