Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-9pm4c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T13:28:06.837Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Progress and Problems: South Asian Economic and Social History c.1720–1860

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

D. A. Washbrook
Affiliation:
University of Warwick

Extract

Over the last fifteen to twenty years, interest in the history of early modern and modern South Asia has grown enormously and has engaged the attention of an increasingly international audience. Whereas, at the end of the 1960s, research in the subject was largely confined to universities in South Asia itself and the rest of the British Commonwealth, today a variety of projects, conferences and regular workshops link together scholars from South Asia and the Commonwealth with those in Japan, Indonesia, France, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Italy, Eastern Europe and the United States. Equally, whereas twenty years ago the publication of South Asia-related research was restricted to a few specialist journals, today this research provides the staple of at least four quarterlies with major international circulations and appears regularly in most of the leading historical periodicals. In the last five years, monographys on South Asia related historical subjects have been published by presses in Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, France, the Soviet Union and Japan as well as, of course, India and Pakistan, the rest of the Commonwealth and the United States.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 The extremely voluminous literature published over recent years on South Asian history c. 1720 –1860 makes it impossible, within the space available, either to provide a comprehensive survey or to review and critique with adequacy and justice the specific contriutions of individual historians. This paper is meant merely to promote the discussion of some general issues. Consequently, I have taken the liberty to keep references to a minimum and to use them as a general pointer towards large bodies of literature within which the general questions under discussion are raised.

2 The four major journals publishing a large amount of South Asian history are: The Indian Economic and Social History Review (IESHR); Modern Asian Studies (MAS); The Journal of Asian Studies (JAS); The journal of peasant Studies (JPS). Over the last five years, South Asia-related research has also appeared in: The Economic History Review; The Journal of Economic History; Comparative Studies in Society and History; Past and present; The Historical Journal; Itinerario; Review; Daedalus; etc.

3 Braudel, F., Capitalism and Material Life, 3 vols (London, 1973)Google Scholar and Afterthoughts on Material Civilization and Capitalism (Maryland, 1977);Google ScholarAnderson, P.Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism and Lineages of the Absolutist State (London, 1974);Google ScholarWallerstein, I., The Modern World System I and II (New York, 1974, 1980);Google ScholarRoberts, J., History of the World (London, 1976).Google Scholar

4 See the classic debate in Morris, M. D. et al. , The Indian Economy in the Nineteenth Century: A Symposium (New Delhi, 1969).Google Scholar

5 Chaudhuri, K. N., Trade and Civilization in the Indian Ocean (Cambridge, 1985);CrossRefGoogle ScholarGupta, A. Das, ‘Indian Merchants and the Western Indian Ocean’, MAS 19, 3 (1985);Google ScholarMcPherson, K., ‘The History of the Indian Ocean Region’, The Great Circle 3 (1981);Google ScholarHabib, I. and Raychaudhuri, T. (eds), The Cambridege Economic History of India, I (Cambridge, 1982), chs XIII (1,2);Google ScholarBayly, C.A., ‘South Asia in the 18th century’, paper read at conference on South Asia in 18th century,University of Warwick,1985.Google Scholar

6 Bairoch, P., ‘International Industrializastion Levels from 1750–1980’, Journal of European Economic History 11, 2 (1982);Google ScholarChaudhuri, K. N., Trade and Civilization and The Trading World of Asia and the English East India Company 1660–1760 (Cambridge), 1978);Google ScholarPerlin, F., ‘Proto-industrialization and Pre-colonial South Asia’, Past and Present 98 (1983).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

7 Chaudhuri, , Trade and Civilization; Perlin, ‘Proto-industrialization’Google ScholarMarshall, P. J., East India Fortunes (Oxford, 1976);Google ScholarPrakash, O., ‘Bullion for Goods’, IESHR 12 (1976).Google Scholar

8 Chaudhuri, K. N., ‘Markets and Traders in India during the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries’ in Chaudhuri, K. N. and Dewey, C. (eds), Economy and Society (New Delhi, 1978);Google ScholarBayly, C. A., ‘Indian Merchants in a Traditional Setting’ in Hopkins, A. and Dewey, C. (eds), The Imperial Impact (London, 1978);Google ScholarPerlin, F., ‘Proto-industrialization’ and ‘State Formation Reconsidered’, MAS 19, 3 1985);Google ScholarHall, K., Trade and Statecraft in the Age of the Colas (New Delhi, 1980);Google ScholarStein, B., Peasant State and Society in Medieval South India (New Delhi, 1980);Google ScholarLudden, D., Peasant History in South India (Princeton, 1985);Google Scholarsee also essays by Perlin, , Stein, , Mukhia, , Sharma, and Habib, in Special Issue on ‘Feudalism’, JPS 12, 2–3 (19841985);Google ScholarHabib, I., ‘Potentialities of Capitalistic Development…’, Journal of Economic History 29, 1 (1969).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

9 Wink, A., Land and Sovereignty in India (Cambridge, 1986);Google ScholarMukhia, H., ‘Illegal Extractions from Peasants’, IESHR 14 (1977);Google ScholarMoosvi, S., ‘The Zamindar's Share in the Peasant Surplus of the Mughal Empire’, IESHR 15 (1978);Google ScholarDirks, N., ‘The Structure and Meaning of Political Relations in a South Indian Little Kingdom’, Contributions to Indian Sociology 13 (1979);CrossRefGoogle ScholarPerlin, , ‘State Formation Reconsidered’; Ziegler, N., ‘Some Notes on Rajput Loyalties during the Mughal Period’ in Richards, J. (ed.), Kingship and Authority in South Asia (Madison, 1978).Google Scholar

10 Moosvi, ‘The Zamindar's Share’; Alam, M., ‘The Zamindars and Mughal Power in the Deccan’, IESHR 10 (1974);Google ScholarPerlin, F., ‘Of White Whales and Countrymen’, JPS 5 (1978);Google ScholarStein, B., ‘Politics, Peasants and the Deconstruction of Feudalism in Medieval India’, JPS 12, 2/3 (1985);Google ScholarWink, , Land and Sovereignty;Google ScholarSingh, D., ‘Ijarah System in Eastern Rajasthan 1750–1800’, Proceedings of Rajasthan History Congress VI (1973).Google Scholar

11 Cohn, B. S., ‘Political Systems in 18th Century India’, Journal of the American Oriental Society 83 (1962)Google Scholar and ‘Structural Change in Indian Rural Society 1596–1885’ in Frykenberg, R. (ed.), Land Control and Social Structure in Indian History (Madison, 1969);Google ScholarStein, , Peasant State;Google ScholarAppadurai, A. and Breckenridge, C., ‘The South Indian Temple: Authority, Honour and Redistribution’, Contributions to Indian Sociology 10, 2 (1976);CrossRefGoogle ScholarDirks, Political Authority’ and ‘The Pasts of a Palaiyakarrar’, JAS 41 (1982);Google ScholarAppadurai, A., Worship and Conflict (Cambridge, 1981);CrossRefGoogle ScholarLeonard, K., The Social History of an Indian Caste (Berkeley, 1979).Google Scholar

12 Leonard, , Social History;Google ScholarDirks, N., The Hollow Crown (Cambridge, forthcoming).Google Scholar

13 Bayly, C. A., Rulers, Townsmen and Bazaars (Cambridge, 1983);Google ScholarCEHI I (ch. 11);Google ScholarWashbrook, D., ‘Some Notes on Market Relations in South India c 1750–1850’, paper presented to workshop on comparative colonial history, University of Leiden, 1981.Google Scholar

14 Moosvi, S., ‘Production, Consumption and Population in Akbar's Time’, IESHR 10, 2 (1973);Google ScholarHabib, I.Aspects of Agrarian Relations and Economy’, IESHR 4 (1967);Google ScholarBayly, , Rulers;Google ScholarBaker, C. J., An Indian Rural Economy (Oxford, 1984);Google ScholarCEHI I IX (ch. 2);Google Scholar Perlin, ‘Of White Whales’; Washbrook, ‘Some Notes’; Ray, R., Change in Bengal Agrarian Society 1760–1850’ (New Delhi, 1979);Google ScholarChowdhury–Lilly, A., The Vagrant Peasant (Wiesbaden, 1982).Google Scholar

15 Stein, B., ‘State Formation and Economy Reconsidered’, MAS 19, (1985);Google ScholarBayly, , Rulers;Google ScholarAli, Athar, ‘The Passing of Empire’, MAS 9, 3 (1975).Google Scholar

16 Calkins, P., ‘The Formation of a Regionally Oriented Ruling Group in Bengal 1700–1740’, JAS 29, 4 (1970);Google ScholarLeonard, K., ‘The Hyderabad Political System and its Participants’, JAS 30, 3 (1971);Google ScholarBarnett, R., North India Between Two Empires (Berkeley, 1980);Google Scholar Perlin, ‘State Formation Reconsidered’; Sen, A., ‘A pre-British Economic Formation’ in De, B. (ed.), Perspectives in the Social Sciences I (Calcutta, 1977).Google Scholar

17 Bayly, Rulers; ‘Stein Formation’; Perlin ‘Of White Whales’.

18 Perlin, ‘State Formation Reconsidered’; Wink, Land and Sovereignty; Bayly, Rulers; Stokes, E., The Peasant and the Raj (Cambridge, 1978), ch. 2; Ludden, Peasant History.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

19 Mukhia, ‘Illegal Extortions’; Rana, R. P., ‘Agrarian Revolts in North India during the Late 17th and Early 18th Centuries’, IESHR 18 (1981);Google ScholarRajayyan, K., Administration and Society in the Carnatic 1701–1801 (Tirupati, 1966)Google Scholar and The Rise and Fall of the Poligars (Madras, 1974);Google ScholarBayly, Rulers; Ziegler, ‘Some Notes’;Google ScholarArasaratnam, S., ‘Weavers, Merchants and the Company’, IESHR 17 (1980);Google ScholarHossain, H., ‘The Alienation of Weavers’, IESHR 16 (1979); Ludden,Peasant History.Google Scholar

20 See Elvin, M., The Pattern of the Chinese Past (London, 1973)Google Scholar and Spence, J., ‘Turbulent Empire’, New York Review of Books 16/1/86;Google Scholaralso Owen, R., The Middle East in the World Economy 1800–1914 (London, 1981), intro.; Athar Ali, ‘The Passing’.Google Scholar

21 Marshall, East India Fortunes; Stein, ‘State Formation and Economy Reconsidered’; Barnett, R.. India between Two Empires; CEHI I (ch. XIII: 2);Google Scholar Bayly, Rulers; Watson, I. B., Foundations for Empire (New Delhi, 1980).Google Scholar

22 Pemble, J. (intro.), Compton, H., A Particular Account of the European Military Adventurers of Hindustan from 1784 to 1803 (Karachi, 1976 reprint);Google ScholarKolff, D., ‘The End of an Ancien Regime: Imperialism in India 1798–1818’, mimeoGoogle Scholar.

23 See Thompson, E. P., Whigs and Hunters (London, 1975).Google Scholar

24 Ludden, Peasant History; Khan, A. M., The Transition in Bengal (Cambridge, 1970).Google ScholarGuha, R., A Rule of Property for Bengal (The Hague, 1963);Google Scholar Stokes, The Peasant; Ray, Agrarian Relations; Frykenberg, R., ‘The Silent Settlement’ in Frykenberg, R. (ed.), Land Tenure and Peasant in South Asia (New Delhi, 1977).Google Scholar

25 For a penetrating discussion of the problem of ‘industrialization’ see Chandavarkar, R., ‘Industrialization in India before 1947’, MAS 19, 3 (1985).Google Scholar

26 Elvin, The Pattern; Chaudhuri, K. N., ‘The Structure of the Indian Textile Industry in the 17th and 18th Centuries’, IESHR 11 (1974) and The Trading World of Asia; Perlin, ‘Proto-industrialization’;Google ScholarHabib, I., ‘Technology and Economy in Mughal India’, IESHR 17 (1980);Google ScholarRamaswami, V., ‘Notes on the Textile Technology of Medieval South India’, IESHR 17 (1980); Ludden, Peasant History; Bayly, Rulers.Google Scholar

27 Bayly, Rulers; Siddiqi, A., Agrarian Change in a Northern Indian State (Oxford, 1973)Google Scholar and Money and Prices in the Earlier Stages of Empire’, IESHR 18 (1981);Google ScholarGuha, A., ‘Raw Cotton in Western India’, IESHR 9 (1972);Google ScholarKumar, D. and Desai, M. (eds), CEHI II (chs III: 1,3,4); Stokes, The Peasant.Google Scholar

28 Bayly, C. A., ‘Peasantisation’, paper read at workshop on comparative colonial history, University of Leiden, 1985;Google ScholarRay, R., ‘The Crisis of Bengal Agriculture’, IESHR 10 (1973);Google ScholarGuha, , ‘Raw Cotton’; CEHI II (ch. III); Baker, A Rural Economy.Google Scholar

29 CEHI II (chs II, III); Bayly, , Rulers;Google ScholarWashbrook, D., ‘Law, State and Agrarian Society in Colonial India’, MAS 15, 3 (1981); Appadurai, Worship and Conflict;Google ScholarDirks, N., ‘From Little King to Landlord’, Comparative Studies in Society and History 28, 2 (1986).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

30 Stokes, The Peasant, chs 5–8.Google Scholar

31 Metcalf, T., Land, Landlords and the British Raj (Berkeley, 1979);Google ScholarKling, B., ‘Economic Foundations of the Bengal Renaissance’ in van Baumer, R. (ed.), Aspects of Bengali History and Society (Hawaii, 1975); Ludden, Peasant History; Washbrook, ‘Law’; Appadurai, Worship.Google Scholar

32 Frykenberg, R., Guntur District 1788–1848. (Oxford, 1965); Ludden, Peasant History; Stokes, The Peasant; Cohn, ‘Structural Change’.Google Scholar

33 Metcalf, Land; Appadurai, Worship; Frykenberg, R., ‘On Road and Riots in Tinnevelly’, South Asia 4, 2 (1982);Google ScholarWashbrook, D., ‘Ethnicity and Racism in Colonial India’ in Ross, R. (ed.), Race and Colonialism (The Hague, 1982).Google Scholar

34 Appadurai, Worship; Dirks, ‘From Little King’; Baker, Rural Economy.

35 Dirks, ‘Structure and Meaning’; Stein, B., Peasant State and All the King's Mana (Madras, 1984); Perlin, ‘State Formation Reconsidered’.Google Scholar

36 Ludden, Peasant History; Mukhia, ‘Illegal Extortions’; Sen, ‘A Pre-British Economic Formation’; Stein, ‘State Formation and Economy Reconsidered’.

37 Ludden, Peasant History; Dirks, ‘From Little King’; Kessinger, T., Vilyatpur 1848–1968 (Berkeley, 1974);Google ScholarDewey, C., ‘Images of the Village Community’, MAS 6, 3 (1972).Google Scholar

38 It need hardly be said that this point opens up a huge question concerning the relationship between exchange and capitalism. Braudel's conventions, by subsuming virtually all relations of exchange (or at least those mediated by money) under the label ‘capitalism’ may be judged teleological and certainly seem to miss the extent to which extended relations of exchange can have their roots and logic in attempts to safeguard subsistence under specific conditions. But space does not permit the pursuing of that line of inquiry here.

39 Stein, ‘Peasants, Politics’.Google Scholar

40 The decline in the relative share of the social product going to agricultural labour is well documented for the late nineteenth century onwards: see CEHI II (ch. III: 4); Baker, , Rural Economy. My own researches would suggest a decline, too, from the late 18th century.Google Scholar