Organic Matter and Consumer Society in Shahjahanabad-Delhi, c. 1648-1858
- Wednesday, 10. December 2025, 16:15 - 17:45
- SAI Building (4130), Room 03 (130.00.03)
- Dr. Jayjeet Lally - University College London
In 1648, the Mughal court settled into the empire’s new capital. In 1858 – after a long twilight of a century or so that cast its shadow most darkly over the monumental city – the last emperor was sent into exile. The city had been made of mud and bricks and mortar, was conceived by philosophes and theologians as a microcosm of the universe, and is often comprehended metaphorically – that is, as a sort of body complete with head, heart, gut, and orifices. This much we know. Turning such thinking on its head, however, this talk conceives the city not as body, but as a place of bodily experience(s) and relations. These experiences, it will be argued, reveal the shifting dynamics between aristocratic privilege and the power of commercial elites, capital and labour, people and space, city and empire and planet. They signal the birth of something we might call consumer society, itself a marker of the interaction between local or vernacular versus global or systemic or ‘modern’ capitalism. At the heart of this discussion will be various kinds of organic matter, for these are crucial to reconnecting the history of capitalism to the advent of the Anthropocene.

Address
SAI Building (4130), Room 03 (130.00.03)
Event Type
Colloquium