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B**N
Educates, in a Limited Way
I finished ploughing through this 500 page book yesterday. The primary hypothesis the author seeks to prove is that the British rule was sustained by violence and authority as opposed to the earlier Mughal period characterized by negotiations and intricate support networks within rural and urban society. This is supposed to counter the romanticist’s version of the British time as a period of order. However, this is a fringe and ill-founded view, at least among Indians. The author has devoted many needless pages to prove why pursuit of prestige and dominance was the sole justification the British had in their own eyes for their India empire. This is a given, and is by and large true for all imperialistic enterprises and not much is gained by seeking to prove this. However, often times military conquest by foreign powers does introduce changes in society which would not be possible otherwise, or come too slowly. So while the British introduced many changes to improve the exercise of their authority, those changes had unintended positive spin-offs. The author has completely ignored this aspect.The second issue I take with the book is the glittering account of Mughal times, even including a whitewash/explaining away of Aurangzeb's excesses. Towards the end of the book, this treatment is extended to Jinnah's communal politics by positing an equivalence between the communal demands of the League and the inclusive agenda of the Congress. However, when I see references to the JNU and Aligarh 'eminent historians' in the book, it is to be expected that there will be a complete glossing over of religious motives for Muslim kings and politicians.In the final analysis, if you limit yourself to proving a point, you will find enough corroborative evidence and can always leave out whatever does not fit your theory. This is a lawyer's method that is adopted by so many historians now. Can these historians lift their gaze over the sweep of history and paint an integral picture?
M**N
An eye-opener for the Empire Apologists and those like me brought up on a diet of how the ...
An eye-opener for the Empire Apologists and those like me brought up on a diet of how the British Empire cleansed India of "brutal" Moghuls, Perfidious Martha's and vain and spendthrift sundry rulers, of how they eliminated the Thugs, Sati and "criminal tribes". This book chronicles how the rapacious British destroyed a well ordered flourishing society and replaced it with a poverty-stricken one beholden to the new rulers whose sole concern was generation of revenue even at the cost of mass starvation and deaths during famines. Opened my eyes. A must read for every Indian and for that matter every Briton.
A**R
An average book
The book is brilliant at some places and less than ordinary at others. I felt there are many unconnected accounts that do not gel with the main theme. These should have been avoided. Often there is some unnecessary detail that makes the reading boring and tiresome. Nonetheless a nice book to have a feel of how the Raj took over reigns of India and how they progressed.
R**J
One of the triggers to the 1st. war of ...
A very interesting and detailed account of British rule in India. The author's sympathetic and impartial treatment of the subject deserves praise. One of the triggers to the 1st. war of Independence was Dalhousie's 'Doctrine of Lapse', Mr. Wilson should have covered it in more detail.
G**I
Interesting book
A quite different view on the "Raj" than the contemporary ones. I am still not through the entire book but whatever I have read has been revealing and interesting. Only book apart from John Keay' s book on history of India that has kept be engaged thoroughly.
C**N
Five Stars
Excellent analysis and real facts presented about the victory and rule of Raj, which Raj lovers hide and glorify.
A**R
Three Stars
Detailed history.
A**I
Delightful
Very informative, very honest, an absolute delight
R**C
Excellent book in these times of rehabilitation of the colonial period...
Jon Wilson is a great historian...
V**N
Myths of British Empire - Challenged and Destroyed
Most books on British Empire thus far focused on the idea of chivalry and heroism of the conquerors, the fiction of their civilizing mission on a helpless people mired in poverty, establishing the rule of law in the subcontinent and the creation of the class of Indians brown in skin color but English in taste, views and values. Jon Wilson explodes these myths and establishes credibly that the colonial regime exercised power by coercion backed by violence, did not have a long-term vision for the country or the society, was perennially anxious about its own survival and acted in an ad-hoc manner with their primary goal of perpetuating the “British sovereignty” regardless of the will of the people it ruled.The book brings out some new information not addressed in past popular works on the subject and provides the narrative with a realistic assessment. The list is long but those that captured my attention are as follow:1. Violence started in 1680 rather than the popular belief that Clive and his minions began their journey of conquest in 1750’s. The violence was driven by the anxiety of survival and the it continued until the end.2. When the colonial judiciary wanted for India a legal system and civil rights on a par with England, the regime’s anxiety of survival led to the 1833 Charter act that centralized the law making and absolute power to the Governor General. That subordinated the judiciary to the executive power and reinforced the ongoing despotic political order and the authority of aristocracy. Macauley’s arguments for the need to govern India by British despotism and the need of absolute power to maintain order and to ensure “the diffusion of European civilization among the vast population of the east” drove the governance.3. The 1825 financial crisis led British manufacturers to flood India with their goods and ships, which destroyed the Indian textile industry and Bombay ship building. Company officers shipped money to banks in Britain leading to capital drain from India and raw material price collapse and suffering of farmers.4. In 1857, it was not a confident government that faced a soldier insurgency as portrayed elsewhere but an anxious regime’s efforts to hold on to power against a popular rebellion. After crushing the rebellion, the regime asserted power by genocidal violence to undo the dishonor of its initial defeat.5. Popular myth is that India would not have the railways but for the British rule. This book brings up the information that the colonial government had no concern for people’s desires for a railroad. In the 1840’s Jeejiboy Jamsetji Tata in Bombay and Dwarakanath Tagore proposed to build a rail lines in Bombay and Bengal but their efforts were frustrated by the lack of support from the government and British finance companies. Governor General Ellenborough (1842-1844) believed that mechanical transportation was a distraction from his mission to impose political order in India. Much later when the railways came to India, it was as an assertion of power through infrastructure and a tool to control the population rather than to enable economic growth. Bombay Governor Frere’s speech while inaugurating the first railway line throws light on the position of the regime: “The greatest benefits for Indians will come not from travelling but by working on the railways and from the closer proximity between indolent Indian workers and their British masters who had the habits of punctuality”.6. Infrastructure development - roads, irrigation, barracks, railway lines - was only focused on the projection of power and maintaining order. Beyond this limited core, expenditure for development was authorized only if it could lead to increased revenue collection.7. Indigenous financial institutions rose as a response to the government’s indifference to people’s suffering during the famines in the 1870’s. Canara Bank, Punjab National Bank, and other financial institutions were built to finance Indian entrepreneurs who could not get funds from British financiers. To protect the British steel industry, the Tatas were denied of their request to build a steel mill in1883. Years later, in 1912, they built their steel mill with the advice of American technicians. These were attempts by the people to assert their autonomy in a conquered society ruled by the threat of violence with no concern for the common man. Religion was another way that people asserted their autonomy, however much limited, that led to movements like Arya Samaj and Tilak’s revival of Ganesh festival.8. The colonial administrators viewed the Swadeshi movement as a challenge to their way of life rather than a movement of Indians towards self-rule. To the notorious Reginald Dyer of the Amristar massacre, the way of life with which he was raised was based on the notion of Indian obedience to British commands. If his commands were not obeyed, Dyer would not be able to consider himself a dignified human being. His response during the Hunter Commission hearings was: “Without the killing, I would be making myself a fool”.9. By 1946, the regime was desperate to hand over power as it was simply incapable of controlling the interim government or the population. Viceroy Wavell proposed to simply abandon India and leave. As a soldier, he viewed power only through the eyes of physical occupation of territory with no concern for the popular opinion. The colonial regime could not reconcile to the idea of power by popular support and wellbeing of the people it ruled.10. British belief in the inferiority of Indian society and the rhetoric about their own civilizational superiority were the principles by which the regime functioned. They saw themselves as virtuous but embattled conquerors and responded by violence rather than negotiation, insisted on formal submission to British authority; did not build social institutions or aim towards good living standards for people; were concerned primarily about maintaining the fiction of absolute sovereignty. They left the subcontinent a divided place and a fragmented society. Building Indian civic institutions was blocked by coercion arising from anxieties. Imperial power was rarely exercised toward any grand purposes or for the public welfare. Its operations were driven by narrow interests based on the desire of a few to maintain British rule in India for its own sake.The book is a valuable contribution towards the reevaluation of the colonial regime and a course correction in the Indian historiography. It deserves a careful read and deliberation in Indian academia, civic society and anyone with an interest in Indian history.
E**E
Persuasive but needs editing
This book contains strong ideas and persuasive arguments but it lacks verve and style. In fact, it's badly written. There I've said it.
K**I
Exact copy of book by same author.
This is an exact copy of the book 'India Conqured' by the same author. I not understand why. I ordered both to find that this is an inferior print of 'India Conqured'. I dis not have time to return it and felt cheated.
M**N
Good quality
Arrived on time and just as advertised
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