Dr Andrew Halladay

Dr Andrew Halladay

Assistant Professor

Department of International History

Room No
SAR.M.10
Office Hours
TBC
Languages
Bengali, English, Hindi, Marathi, Persian, Sanskrit, Urdu
Key Expertise
Modern South Asia, Cultural History, Imperialism and Empire

About me

Andrew is a historian of modern South Asia and its relationships with the wider world. Combining methods of cultural and political history, his research interrogates shifts in Indian identity during the colonial period and has been or will soon be published in venues like The Historical Journal and Modern Asian Studies.

Unifying his work is the idea that popular symbols can reveal histories of everyday Indians. Illustrative of this principle is his first book project, A Distant Throne: The British Sovereign in the Mirror of Indian Nationalism, 1919–36, which considers how Indians across the social spectrum creatively repurposed the figure of the British monarch to forward their own political propositions. His articles on the Esperanto movement in India and the (post)colonial afterlife of the warrior king Shivaji (r. 1674–80) similarly demonstrate how public institutions and figures emerged as critical sites for mobilization during the nationalist period.

Awarded the Fulbright-Nehru Fellowship and the Metcalf Fellowship in Indian History, Andrew holds a joint PhD in History and South Asian Languages and Civilizations from the University of Chicago and a master’s degree in theological studies from Harvard Divinity School, where he specialized in the traditions of Islam. Prior to joining LSE, he held a postdoctoral fellowship at Johns Hopkins University. Topics for his current and future projects include the role of the 1857 Mutiny in shaping British tourism in India, the afterlife of Buddhist relics discovered in modern-day Pakistan, the experience of the Indian film pioneer Himansu Rai in the German film industry, and the imprisonment of so-called suspicious foreigners in Bombay during the First World War.

Expertise Details

South Asia in the Modern World; Cultural Memory; The Legacy of the Mughal and Maratha Empires; the Politics of Language; The British Monarchy in India

Publications

  • ‘The Many Swords of Shivaji: Searching for a Weapon, Finding a Nation.’ Modern Asian Studies 58, no. 1 (January 2024): 244–94.

  • ‘A Community of Hope: Liminality, Belonging, and the Early Esperanto Movement in India.’ Forthcoming in The Historical Journal.

  • ‘“India Has Utterly Changed”: Shivaji and Modernity in a Colonial Sanskrit Novel.’ The Life of Contemporary Sanskrit: Dialogues between Tradition and Modernity. Edited by Laurie Patton and Charles Preston. In Vol. 9 in Dialogues in South Asian Traditions. Edited by Laurie Patton, Brian Black, and Chakravarthi Ram-Prasad. London: Routledge, forthcoming 2025.

  • A Distant Throne: The British Sovereign in the Mirror of Indian Nationalism, 1919–36 (first monograph project).

Teaching

Awards

  • American Institute of Indian Studies Junior Fellowship: Metcalf Fellowship in Indian History (declined due to the Covid pandemic).

  • Fulbright-Nehru Fellowship:  Delhi and Pune, India: 2019–2020.