02151nam a22001577a 4500999001900000008004100019100002600060245010700086260005100193300003600244520142600280650011801706773005101824942000701875952011101882 c531022d531022250724b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aSaxena, Medha 955617 a Island networks: Telecommunications in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the early twentieth century aThe Indian Economic and Social History Review  a62(2), Apr-Jun, 2025: p.189-221 aIn the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, British colonial discourse was marked by a concern with new forms of telecommunication (telephony and wireless) for maintaining the security of their far-flung possessions. Historically located in an area of intense commercial and social activity, the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal became marginalised in the colonial narrative. Initially occupied for strategic reasons, the islands were used to incarcerate criminals and political prisoners after 1857. The desire to stay connected to the Indian mainland and the simultaneous need to maintain the isolation of the prisoner population made the islands a fertile ground for discussion over a secure system of communication. Telecommunications became the new tool to mitigate the fear and anxiety, both real and imagined, generated by this geography and its inhabitants. This article will analyse how geopolitics framed the establishment of communication lines in the region and how the information flows were monitored to maintain control. Since new technologies had the potential to disrupt old orders of information, censorship became as crucial as connection. The article will also look at how technology in turn challenged imperial hegemony and revealed the inconsistencies within the workings of the colonial state.- Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/00194646251330473  aTelecommunications, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Geopolitics, Information, flow, Fear/anxiety, Isolation. 955618 aThe Indian Economic and Social History Review  cAR 00102ddc40709406221aIIPAbIIPAd2025-07-24h62(2), Apr-Jun, 2025: p.189-221pAR136777r2025-07-24yAR