I. Concluding Remarks
After nine years of working together and on the cusp of our final funding period, it seems appropriate to look back at the road already travelled.
In November 2014 a dedicated team of students, coordinators, principal investigators, and our innovative tandem-duos, teaming up Indian and German pre- and post-docs, began with the identification and description of archival holdings stored in German archives that are of interest to the historian of modern India and/or Indo-German entangled history. With the launch of the MIDA website in May 2019, this growing dataset could be accessed through our database, accompanied by our open-access journal MIDA Archival Reflexicon. The Reflexicon – as we affectionately call it – creates a space for contemplating the methodological and epistemological questions that arise from working with these underestimated resources, which are housed in archives not commonly associated with the colonization of the subcontinent, whilst showing the potential of concrete archival holdings with specific thematic examples.
Soon thereafter it became clear that another medium was needed to adequately display research data emerging from the project, which did not fit the framework of the database or the Reflexicon, but was too precious to just keep in our digital drawers – leading to the birth of the MIDA Thematic Resources. Through this format, we publish data sets in a paginated pdf version, which can be cited, as well as a spreadsheet file, which can be sorted, searched through, and analysed further. Georg Lilie’s list shows the true potential of the format to open up the field for several possible research projects, by listing a large amount of valuable fundamental research on the exchange between trade unions of India and the GDR. Gerdien Jonker’s 2021 Postscript to her Reflexicon entry originally published two years prior on the other hand demonstrates the advantage of publishing online, namely the possibility to update and expand upon earlier work and even opening up a dialogue with one’s readers.
Guided by the thematic signposts intellectual, political, economic, and mission history, the work on the database and the two publication series and the individual projects within our tandem-duos expanded into numerous workshops, conferences, lectures, seminars, miscellaneous publications and even a feature-length film, thereby exemplifying the vastness of this often untouched source base. And aside all the knowledge production and transfer the team grew together and stayed in contact, across the distance between our two seats Berlin and Göttingen and often beyond one’s time in the project, with the highlight being the early morning walks and late-night chats during our academic retreats in our beloved Akademie Waldschlösschen near Göttingen.
II. Knowledge Transfer and Accessibility
Three funding periods after the beginning in 2014, BAs turned into MAs, pre- into post-docs, and the database has grown to now contain 88 archives and 2710 holdings. With the relaunch of our web presence in 2023, the MIDA publications team put its focus even more on reaching a wider and more diverse audience and making our publications work for our readers as well as our authors.
To broaden our reach, we have teamed up with the Max Weber Forum Delhi and have republished all our articles and research data collections via the Max Weber Foundation’s digital repository Perspectivia.net in the tried and trusted formats MIDA Archival Reflexicon and MIDA Thematic Resources. The publications now all carry a DOI and are transmitted into a wide network of open-access databases and academic search engines via perspectivia.net. The licensing of the publications with CC-BY-ND 4.0 guarantees the open-access nature which was at the core of the MIDA publishing concept from the very beginning as well as our authors’ rights to be given appropriate credit when their work is shared. In addition, our publications team tirelessly adds findings from our publications into relevant Wikipedia-articles, thereby contributing to the spread of academic results whilst heightening the projects visibility in the public arena.
Looking at the overhauled website itself, the minimal and responsive design of the HTML version of our articles enables comfortable access even with slower internet connections and on all standard mobile devices. The downloadable PDF versions allow tracking one’s own thoughts – digitally or on the paper – and have been optimized for screen readers in an effort to reduce the limitations one’s eyes can pose on the gathering of information in a mostly text based academic discourse. With one of the elements of this task being the description of visual sources (i.e. photographs, scanned documents) displayed in the article, a seemingly technical task turned into a surprisingly creative one. To lighten this load for the publishing team we kindly ask authors of future publications to include detailed descriptions of the visual material they want to use in their articles.
Our heartfelt thanks go to:
- Sebastian Schwecke (Max Weber Forum Delhi) as well as Michael Kaiser, Katrin Neumann, Maria Wiegel, and Julian Schulz (Max Weber Stiftung / perspectivia.net) for their cooperation and support in bringing the Archival Reflexicon and Thematic Resources to the next level of academic publishing,
- Peter Albertz and Marina Lemaire (Servicecenter eSciences, Universität Trier) for their continuing support in maintaining and improving our web presence,
- Monja Hofmann, the mastermind behind MIDA’s web presence and publishing layouts, for her years of superb diligent technical and creative work,
and to the entire MIDA team, our academic advisory board, and extended MIDA network for all the progress made, insights gained, and heartfelt laughs found along the way.
III. A call to action
Looking forward, we see the transition into the final funding period as an invitation and call to action to simultaneously conclude, order, and optimise the data we already have gathered, while still exploring new threads and showing where this and similar projects could lead if pursued further. One of those threads is our Reading Day which is regularily held since April 2023. By engaging with different writings on postcolonialsm, we aim to embed MIDA in the larger debate on Germany’s (post)coloniality and enrich it by scrutinizing Indo-German relations. On the basis of these reading forums, we are developing a conference in 2025 provisionally entitled “The Long History of German Involvement in the European Colonial Project: Perspectives from India”.
But we also want to frame this last leg of the journey as an invitation and call to action to our contributors and readers, who can actively support our efforts by supplying relevant Wikipedia-articles, descriptions of visual sources, or even leads to new archives for our database or data sets for one of our Thematic Resources – and lastly with new fascinating articles or lists for our publication series.
To kick-off this process we are planning a conference conceptually akin to the Reflexicon, which will be held in September 2024 at the Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient. Further information will follow.