Developing India
An Intellectual and Social History, c. 1930-50
Price: 645.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198086079
Publication date:
28/09/2012
Paperback
368 pages
215x140mm
Price: 645.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198086079
Publication date:
28/09/2012
Paperback
368 pages
Part of Oxford India Paperbacks
Benjamin Zachariah
Significant research done by author in the unique aspect of history of development,Gives a distinctive historical perspective on the intellectual history in India in the given period,Topic pan Indian and has contemporary relevance,Book deals with the important planning years of 1930-50
Rights: World Rights
Benjamin Zachariah
Description
This book is about the ideas regarding the concept of the term 'development' which emerged in circa 1930-50. It is a study of the formative period in history when the underlying notions of progress, self-government, and nation building were articulated. The author considers how the notions were driven by immediate political battles, yet inspired by a vision of the future that incorporated notions of sovereignty and equity.
Drawing on a variety of intellectual resources, the author analyses three themes around development: the importance of science and technology, the need for the government to express certain social concerns, and the need for national discipline. The argument is that alternative notions of development-consciously different from those based on free trade and industrialization could emerge in the inter-war period, when the future of capitalism did not appear as assured as they did in the nineteenth century. This book opens up a new arena in the historiography of South Asia, that of an intellectual history of late colonialism in India, and of the nationalism that succeeded it.
About the Author
Benjamin Zachariah, Reader in South Asian History, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Benjamin Zachariah is Reader in South Asian History, Department of History, University of Sheffield.
Benjamin Zachariah
Table of contents
Abbreviations
Preface
1. Introduction
2. The Context
3. A Reformed Imperium?
4. The Debate on Gandhian Ideas
5. Development: Possible Nations
6. Conclusions
Glossary
Select Bibliography
Index
Benjamin Zachariah
Description
This book is about the ideas regarding the concept of the term 'development' which emerged in circa 1930-50. It is a study of the formative period in history when the underlying notions of progress, self-government, and nation building were articulated. The author considers how the notions were driven by immediate political battles, yet inspired by a vision of the future that incorporated notions of sovereignty and equity.
Drawing on a variety of intellectual resources, the author analyses three themes around development: the importance of science and technology, the need for the government to express certain social concerns, and the need for national discipline. The argument is that alternative notions of development-consciously different from those based on free trade and industrialization could emerge in the inter-war period, when the future of capitalism did not appear as assured as they did in the nineteenth century. This book opens up a new arena in the historiography of South Asia, that of an intellectual history of late colonialism in India, and of the nationalism that succeeded it.
About the Author
Benjamin Zachariah, Reader in South Asian History, Department of History, University of Sheffield
Benjamin Zachariah is Reader in South Asian History, Department of History, University of Sheffield.
Table of contents
Abbreviations
Preface
1. Introduction
2. The Context
3. A Reformed Imperium?
4. The Debate on Gandhian Ideas
5. Development: Possible Nations
6. Conclusions
Glossary
Select Bibliography
Index
The Nehru-Era Economic History and Thought & Their Lasting Impact
Arvind Panagariya
The Oxford India Anthology of Business History
Medha Kudaisya
The Economic History of India, 1857-2010
Tirthankar Roy


