Ishita Pande is a historian of post/colonial South Asia and the British Empire. Her first book, (London: Routledge, 2010; paperback 2012). The book uses medical texts as an archive to tell the story of the impact of the colonial connection on race science in Britain, the strange compatibility of race science and imperial liberalism, and the crucial role of race in practices of colonial governance, as well as in nationalist arguments for self-government, in colonial India.
Her recent book, (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2020) is a dual biography of a path-breaking law regulating child marriages that was passed in India in 1929, and of 鈥渁ge鈥 itself as a scientific object created at the nexus of forensic technologies, bureaucratic practices, sexual morality, liberal jurisprudence, social scientific inquiry, and various forms of political activism. She continues to use feminist, postcolonial and queer theory to unsettle categories of analysis in two new projects. The first is a history of the 鈥渟exual sciences鈥 in twentieth century India, and the second a history of 鈥渁ge鈥 in the British imperial world. Both examine the relationship between the intimate and the global as categories of thought.
She welcomes students working on all aspects of colonial and postcolonial history in India or projects informed by critical theory focused on other parts of the British Empire. She is particularly interested in supervising projects that focus on the various subjects that animate her own work 鈥 the history of power and knowledge (including the history of law, science and medicine), and the history of gender and sexuality (including the history of childhood and youth).
Sex, Law and the Politics of Age: Child Marriage in India, 1891-1937
India in the eighteenth to twentieth centuries; British colonial history; critical global history; history of science and medicine; race, gender and sexuality, childhood studies; legal history.