Empires in Indian History and Other Essays
Contents: Preface. 1. Empires in Indian history. 2. From chariot to atom Bomb: Armament and Military organization in South Asian history. 3. The state society in India from ancient times to the present. 4. Akbar and Philip II of Spain: contrasting strategies of imperial consolidation. 5. Gandhi and Nehru: two visions of India. 6. The rural roots of Jharkhand. 7. The self-consciousness of post-imperial nations: a cross-national comparison. 8. The de-industrialization of India. 9. Mumbai: from fishing village to metropolis. 10. Nation building in India under British rule. 11. Max Muller's science of language and religion. 12. Rajghat: in memory of the Mahatma. Bibliography. Index.
The title essay 'Empires in Indian History follows the trajectory of imperial formations from the millenial state of the Indus civilization to the comparatively short-lived imposition of the British Indian empire. The subsequent two essays deal with the historical role of armament and the emergence of a state society which provided a durable support to various realms. This is followed by a comparative study of the strategies of imperial consolidation of Akbar and Philip II of Spain. The next essays turn to modern history, beginning with a comparison of Gandhi's and Nehru's visions of India. The rural roots of Jharkhand are then traced in terms of the history of tribal and peasant revolts in this remote region of India. A Cross-national study of the experiences of post-imperial nations introduces a new perspective.
Many nations had to give up their colonies after 1945 and there have been intense debates within these nations in recent years but hardly any attempts have been made to analyse the similarities and contrasts of these debates. Further essays deal with the de-industrialization of India, the fate of Mumbai and the process of nation-building in India under British rule. The British contributed to this process unwittingly as they did not believe that an Indian nation really existed. Max Muller, the German indologist who was a friend of Indian nationalists and influenced the debates of his times in the fields of linguistics and comparative religion is the subject of the penultimate essay while the last one is devoted to Gandhi's Samadhi at Rajghat, New Delhi. (jacket)