“…This includes the introduction of a census but also extends to linguistic scholarship such as the Linguistic Survey of India (LSI) (1903–1928), undertaken by George Abraham Grierson. In her examination of the LSI, Hannah Carlan demonstrates how the objectification of language “as a natural object” led to “essentialized portraits of ‘weak’ and ‘strong’ languages,” characteristics that were then transferred to its speakers' “intellectual capacities” (2018, 101). These raciolinguistic ideologies also informed colonial debates over the medium of education for Indians (see, e.g., Annamalai, 2005; Evans, 2002; Pennycook, 1998) in which advocates of English education drew on discourses of civilization and enlightenment and the construction of the inherently “superior” language of English as a means to access science, modernization, and “the benefits of European knowledge” (Annamalai, 2005; Pennycook, 1998, 75).…”