Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855

Drawing on archival materials, family stories, and student artwork, “Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855” examines how nineteenth-century American missionary education in South Asia facilitated dominant-caste supremacy while distributing negotiat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Balmforth, Mark Edward
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-axqs-tk95
id ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-d8-axqs-tk95
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-d8-axqs-tk952020-10-20T05:03:32ZSchooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855Balmforth, Mark Edward2020ThesesSouth AsiansReligionHistoryNineteenth centuryCasteImperialism--British coloniesMissionsDrawing on archival materials, family stories, and student artwork, “Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855” examines how nineteenth-century American missionary education in South Asia facilitated dominant-caste supremacy while distributing negotiated sensibilities of colonial modernity. The work’s first section explores the arrangement of an educational nexus of mutual benefit between the Jaffna Peninsula’s dominant Veḷḷāḷar caste, the British Ceylonese government, and American Protestant missionaries. I track this nexus from its origins in the veranda school of Tamil Śaiva poet Kūḻaṅkai Tampirāṉ (1699–1795) to its apogee in the American Ceylon Mission boarding schools of the late 1840s. The dissertation’s second part examines two pedagogies of colonial modernity: the embroidery of needlework samplers that taught an American form of gendered domesticity, and map drawing that imparted a geographically specific and American-style national identity. By describing three moments in its development and two pedagogical facets of its career, the dissertation argues that an educational nexus crafted for some Veḷḷāḷars a distinct Jaffna Tamil identity that is geographically bound, gendered, and pervaded by a sense of superiority. This dissertation makes two significant contributions to South Asian studies, first by demonstrating an unexamined arrangement of power in the context of colonialism—the educational nexus—and second, by exploring the way colonial teaching methods in the first half of the nineteenth century transformed South Asian ways of being.Englishhttps://doi.org/10.7916/d8-axqs-tk95
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic South Asians
Religion
History
Nineteenth century
Caste
Imperialism--British colonies
Missions
spellingShingle South Asians
Religion
History
Nineteenth century
Caste
Imperialism--British colonies
Missions
Balmforth, Mark Edward
Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855
description Drawing on archival materials, family stories, and student artwork, “Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855” examines how nineteenth-century American missionary education in South Asia facilitated dominant-caste supremacy while distributing negotiated sensibilities of colonial modernity. The work’s first section explores the arrangement of an educational nexus of mutual benefit between the Jaffna Peninsula’s dominant Veḷḷāḷar caste, the British Ceylonese government, and American Protestant missionaries. I track this nexus from its origins in the veranda school of Tamil Śaiva poet Kūḻaṅkai Tampirāṉ (1699–1795) to its apogee in the American Ceylon Mission boarding schools of the late 1840s. The dissertation’s second part examines two pedagogies of colonial modernity: the embroidery of needlework samplers that taught an American form of gendered domesticity, and map drawing that imparted a geographically specific and American-style national identity. By describing three moments in its development and two pedagogical facets of its career, the dissertation argues that an educational nexus crafted for some Veḷḷāḷars a distinct Jaffna Tamil identity that is geographically bound, gendered, and pervaded by a sense of superiority. This dissertation makes two significant contributions to South Asian studies, first by demonstrating an unexamined arrangement of power in the context of colonialism—the educational nexus—and second, by exploring the way colonial teaching methods in the first half of the nineteenth century transformed South Asian ways of being.
author Balmforth, Mark Edward
author_facet Balmforth, Mark Edward
author_sort Balmforth, Mark Edward
title Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855
title_short Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855
title_full Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855
title_fullStr Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855
title_full_unstemmed Schooling the Master: Caste Supremacy and American Education in British Ceylon, 1795–1855
title_sort schooling the master: caste supremacy and american education in british ceylon, 1795–1855
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-axqs-tk95
work_keys_str_mv AT balmforthmarkedward schoolingthemastercastesupremacyandamericaneducationinbritishceylon17951855
_version_ 1719352803745333248