India Conquered: Britain''s Raj and the Chaos of Empire
English
By (author): Jon Wilson
'The product of many years of detailed archival research, Wilsons book is without question the best one-volume history of the Raj currently in print.' - William Dalrymple, The Guardian
The core of the book is a virtuoso takedown of cherished shibboleths of Raj mythology Financial Times
A forceful reminder that Britain has its own messy past to come to terms with Guardian
In the nineteenth century, imperial India was at the centre of Britains global power. But since its partition between India and Pakistan in 1947, the Raj has divided opinion: some celebrate its supposed role in creating much that is good in the modern world; others condemn it as the cause of continuing poverty. Today, the Raj lives on in faded images of Britains former glory, a notion used now to sell goods in India as well as Europe. But its real character has been poorly understood.
India Conquered is the first general history of British India for over twenty years, getting under the skin of empire to show how British rule really worked. Oscillating between paranoid paralysis and moments of extreme violence, it was beset by chaos and chronic weakness. Jon Wilson argues that this contradictory character was a consequence of the Rajs failure to create long-term relationships with Indian society and claims that these systemic problems still affect the worlds largest democracy as it navigates the twenty-first century.
This is a brave and long overdue riposte to Raj romanticists John Keay See more
The core of the book is a virtuoso takedown of cherished shibboleths of Raj mythology Financial Times
A forceful reminder that Britain has its own messy past to come to terms with Guardian
In the nineteenth century, imperial India was at the centre of Britains global power. But since its partition between India and Pakistan in 1947, the Raj has divided opinion: some celebrate its supposed role in creating much that is good in the modern world; others condemn it as the cause of continuing poverty. Today, the Raj lives on in faded images of Britains former glory, a notion used now to sell goods in India as well as Europe. But its real character has been poorly understood.
India Conquered is the first general history of British India for over twenty years, getting under the skin of empire to show how British rule really worked. Oscillating between paranoid paralysis and moments of extreme violence, it was beset by chaos and chronic weakness. Jon Wilson argues that this contradictory character was a consequence of the Rajs failure to create long-term relationships with Indian society and claims that these systemic problems still affect the worlds largest democracy as it navigates the twenty-first century.
This is a brave and long overdue riposte to Raj romanticists John Keay See more
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