As noted on our homepage and in the JAS article, our goal in creating this database is to recognize that an approach that takes seriously cultural, scientific, and economic life leads to different sources and different historical arguments from an approach focused on political life. Such a shift in emphasis, away from conflict and onto moments of contact, comparison, cooperation, and competition, can contribute fresh perspectives not just on the histories of China and India, but also on the histories of the Global South. With that in mind, we encourage the use of this database for both research and teaching.
In its simplest form, the database can be viewed as a chronological listing of various events and encounters. As of now, this amounts to a little over 180 different entries. For those interested in exploring specific themes in greater detail we have also provided three additional filters, two of which are available in the drop down menus at the top of the timeline. A third filter is a listing of all individuals, which is provided through the “Individuals” tab on the menu bar.
We hope these additional tools will allow for a more interesting and useful browsing experience, whether the goal is research or teaching. We envision at least a handful of ways in which such work might proceed.
As an example of the timeline’s ability to surprise, consider the divergent histories of Dwarkanath Kotnis (柯棣华; 1910-1942) and Madan Mohanlal Atal (爱德华; 1888-1957). Both were members of a five-man Indian Medical Mission that was sent to China in 1938. Kotnis, who ended up staying in China for nearly five years and married a Chinese woman, was the only member not to survive the mission. He has since been memorialized on both sides of the border. A 1946 Indian film celebrated his life and the Chinese Communist Party continues to honor his contribution to their struggle against the Japanese. Atal, who was actually the leader of the medical mission, has disappeared from contemporary memory. But in the 1950s, he too was honored by the Chinese, being invited to Beijing in late 1957. As it turns out, he fell ill during the trip and died in early December. Following a memorial meeting in his honor in Beijing, some of his ashes were immersed in the Yellow River. Atal’s unexplored legacy has long been overshadowed by that of Kotnis, leaving us with a possibly skewed sense of the medical mission and its immediate legacy.