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Acknowledgments The longer one takes to complete such a project, the lengthier the list of debts becomes. In its early forms, Gauri Viswanathan, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Nicholas Dirks, Talal Asad, Emma Rothschild, Jenny Davidson, and Seamus Deane all provided helpful comments and criticism . I benefited more broadly from a range of scholars who were at or passed through Columbia University. The memory of Edward Said’s seminar remarks and casual asides is unavoidably with me when I recall this group of people. The widely divergent manner in which they conducted their intellectual lives was itself instructive. As much a part of this world were friends and colleagues Sanjay Krishnan, Milind Wakankar , Tim Watson, Qadri Ismail, Aamir Mufti, Colleen Lye, Sanjay Reddy, Teena Purohit, Chenxi Tang, Nauman Naqvi, Nermeen Shaikh, Jonathan Magidoff, Ninon Vinsonneau, and Clarisse Berthezène. A range of individuals and research institutions assisted my work through fellowships: a Fulbright for study at the Institut für Kulturwissenschaft at Humboldt University in Berlin allowed me to read widely (my thanks to Hartmut Böhme there and to Andreas Huyssen for his assistance); a William Reese Company fellowship from the John Carter Brown Library, directed by Norman Fiering, gave me tactile access to Histoire des deux Indes; the Princeton Society of Fellows (then ably directed by Leonard Barkan, whom I must thank) enabled me to expand the scope of this project; an Ahmanson-Getty Fellowship from the Clark Memorial Library at the University of California–Los Angeles put me in touch with intellectual historians of empire (I thank Peter Hanns Reill, Anthony Pagden, and Sanjay Subrahmanyam for this opportunity); and, xii / acknowledgments finally, the Newberry Library in Chicago, where I attended a National Endowment for the Humanities summer seminar on the French and Haitian Revolutions, led by Jeremy Popkin (I must also acknowledge my discussions with Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze here, now sadly passed away). The Newberry also graciously provided me with research space as a scholar in residence for several years. During the two years I spent at Princeton, Gyan Prakash, Michael Wood, Claudia Johnson, Hans Aarsleff, and Mary Harper were all generous with their time and support. I would like to thank my colleagues in Ann Arbor while I was in the English Department at the University of Michigan, especially Patricia Yaeger, Jonathan Freedman, Sidonie Smith, Lincoln Faller, David Porter, Dena Goodman, Sumathi Ramaswamy , Scotti Parrish, Adela Pinch, Lucy Hartley, Yopie Prins, Barbara Metcalf, James I. Porter, and Sean Jacobs. Since joining the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2008, it has been my pleasure to interact with faculty in both the Department of English as well as History. Their encouragement and the intellectual diversity (if my colleague noted below will permit me the word!) of their opinions and interests has taught me the worth of provocative critique. I must particularly thank Mark Canuel, always ready with advice and gentle nudges to move forward with this book. Beside him were many others who were supportive (or productively challenging) interlocutors: Lennard Davis, Lisa Freeman, Robin Grey, Laura Hostetler, Jim Sack (an especially careful reader!), Astrida Orle Tantillo, the late James Searing (his sudden passing is still a shock), Walter Benn Michaels, Joseph Tabbi, Ellen McClure, Nicholas Brown, Deirdre McClosky, Alfred Thomas, Dwight McBride, John Huntington, Gerald Graff, Stephen Engelmann, Rachel Havrelock, Ainsworth Clarke, Anna Kornbluh, and Corey Capers. Along the way, others allowed me to present parts of this work or provided comments and suggestions: Margaret Cohen, Srinivas Aravamudan , Uday Mehta, Ato Quayson, Sankar Muthu, David Armitage, James E. G. Zetzel, Jennifer Pitts, Ajay Skaria, Ranajit Guha, Isabelle ClarkDec ès, Jim Clark, Sudipta Kaviraj, David Bromwich, Akeel Bilgrami, Betty Joseph, Pauline Lavagne, Isabelle Gadoin, Marie-Élise Palmier-Chatelain, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, Susanne Greilich, Carla Hesse, Bhikhu Parekh, Ann Thomson, Thomas Metcalf, Kapil Raj, Matthew Smith, John Mowitt, Siraj Ahmed, and the late Yves Benot. Suvir Kaul provided detailed suggestions . I am very aware that some of those named may not agree with the arguments of this book; misreadings and mistakes that follow are most certainly my own, but I hope in the spirit of discussion (I will not say the public use of reason) that they will momentarily indulge the work. [13.58.39.23] Project MUSE (2024-04-23 16:32 GMT) acknowledgments / xiii In addition to the Modern Language Association and the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, portions of this book were presented at the following research forums or conferences: the Bloomington Eighteenth-Century Workshop, organized by...

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