New Books Network

Baijayanti Roy, "The Nazi Study of India and Indian Anti-Colonialism" (Oxford UP, 2024)

Jan 1, 2026
Exploring the links between German scholars and Indian anti-colonialists reveals a complex interplay of knowledge and power. Baijayanti Roy discusses how these academics provided expertise to the Nazis in exchange for support. The Munich India Institute's transformation into a propaganda machine and its ties to Subhas Chandra Bose are examined. Roy highlights the varying experiences of Indian students under the regime and warns of the humanities' vulnerability to political influence. This intriguing analysis uncovers a murky chapter of history.
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ANECDOTE

Unlikely Path To A PhD In Germany

  • Baijayanti Roy recounts arriving in Germany as a married mother and pursuing a PhD against initial skepticism.
  • She describes struggling for supervisors and winning a German Research Foundation grant that enabled the project.
INSIGHT

Modern India Over Ancient Sanskrit

  • Roy shows Nazi needs focused on modern India and anti-colonial movements rather than ancient Sanskrit studies.
  • She therefore studies the broader 'knowledge of India' beyond traditional Indology.
INSIGHT

Knowledge As Traded Resource

  • Roy frames interactions as a resource exchange where scholars traded expertise for positions, pay, prestige, or survival.
  • Nazi institutions competed for such knowledge, creating complex, pragmatic collaborations.
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