“The best account I have yet read of the enchanted and uncanny world of stories and beliefs that Bengalis like myself grew up in.” - Amitav Ghosh “This strikingly original study returns ghosts, long unjustly neglected, back to their rightful place at the heart of the history of Bengali colonial modernity. By a fascinating series of literary, historical, and theoretical analyses, it reveals colonial reason’s obsession with the irrational and presents the narrative of replacement of decorous magical ghosts of premodernity by new forms of the uncanny and monstrous lodged in the disenchanted structures of capitalist economies and modern nation-states.” - Sudipta Kaviraj, Professor of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies, Columbia University
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. Uncanny Histories: Ghosts, Fear, and Reason in Colonial Bengal 1
1. “Undisciplined, Playful and Yet Bhadra”: Old Ghosts and Their Advocates in an Age of Enlightenment 22
2. The New Spirits 55
3. Deadly Spaces: Haunted Homes and Haunting Histories 82
4. Enacting Ghosts: New Spirits, New Rituals 97
5. National Ghosts, Ghostly Nations 130
Conclusion. Thinking about Ends and Beginnings 155
Notes 159
Bibliography 187
Index 203