Indian Cultural Diplomacy And Soft Power In The Late Colonial Period: Intellectual Networks, Institutions, And Global

30 Mar

Authors: Gajendra Singh

Abstract: In the late colonial period (c. 1880s–1947), Indian intellectuals and cultural institutions deployed forms of cultural diplomacy and soft power to shape international perceptions and contest imperial narratives. This paper examines how intellectual networks such as Rabindranath Tagore, Swami Vivekananda, and transnational theosophical and nationalist circles, along with institutions including Visva-Bharati, the Theosophical Society, and artistic and scholarly organizations, functioned as instruments of global cultural projection. Through archival and textual analysis of speeches, institutional records, exhibitions, and contemporary publications, the study argues that these cultural initiatives promoted narratives of India’s civilizational depth, ethical authority, and intellectual vitality. International lecture tours, educational exchanges, and participation in global cultural forums enabled Indian actors to engage global audiences and challenge colonial portrayals of India as culturally subordinate. These intellectual and institutional networks created alternative spaces for dialogue, fostered international solidarity, and contributed to the formation of a global cultural presence rooted in India’s historical traditions. By situating cultural diplomacy within the broader framework of anti-colonial resistance and identity formation, this paper demonstrates that soft power operated as a significant tool in undermining imperial legitimacy and shaping India’s emergence as a culturally influential nation in the modern world.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19327946