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Chapter 3 - The advent of liberal thought in India and beyond

civil society and the press

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

C. A. Bayly
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The third and fourth transnational contexts for the emergence of Indian liberalism, besides the idea of the constitution and the jury, were the issues of press freedom and the security of property. To general arguments in favour of freedom of communication Indian writers brought very specific grievances which derived from a sense that an open system of plaint and petition prevalent in pre-colonial India had been closed down and rendered secretive and unaccountable by the Company, both by restrictions on judicial openness and through press censorship. Here Mughal exemplars of free access to authority were invoked to root ideas which were appropriated from European and American debates.

Ideologies of a free press

Free communication was an essential foundation of the Western liberal theory of civil society, as important as free trade and, like free trade, regarded as a moral as well as an economic imperative. Adam Ferguson, in particular, argued that ‘communication’ and debate were vital for the health of national collectivities and human liberty. Jeremy Bentham, as ever, rationalised the liberals’ ideology of free communication into a legislative principle. Non-readers were one of the few categories of people that he initially wanted to be excluded from the general franchise. A free press could rapidly work miracles, however. Writing on the affairs of Tripoli, Bentham contended that the foundation of newspapers would rapidly dissolve Muslim ‘despotism’ and create a ‘tribunal of public opinion’.

Type
Chapter
Information
Recovering Liberties
Indian Thought in the Age of Liberalism and Empire
, pp. 73 - 103
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

Rammohan Roy and the advent of constitutional liberalism in IndiaModern Intellectual History 4 2007 35
Rammohun Roy and the making of Victorian BritainCambridge, Mass. 2010 97CrossRef
Marcus, Calcutta Journal 21 1822
Rickards, RobertIndia; or, facts submitted to illustrate the character and condition of the native inhabitants 2 London 1829Google Scholar
An examination of the arguments against a free press in IndiaOriental Herald 2 1824 219
Mukerjah, Ram RuttunAn appeal to the British nationBengal Herald 7 1833Google Scholar
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Mills, Philo-HinduAsiatic Journal 7 1819 27Google Scholar
Observations on the exposé read and solemnly sanctioned by the Hindoo Literary Society at its formation in Calcutta, February 1825Friend of India Quarterly 2:8 1822 565
A NativeColombo Journal 29 1832 Sivasundaram, Google Scholar
Milner, AnthonyThe invention of politics in colonial Malaya: contesting nationalism and the expansion of the public sphereCambridge 1995CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rammohan’s, Asiatic Journal 6 1818 143
Carpenter, LantRam Mohun RoyBristol Gazette 12 1833Google Scholar
Nehru, Uttar Pradesh ka Kumbh VisheshankLucknow: Uttar Pradesh Sarkar 1965Google Scholar

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