Indian Society And The Making Of The British Em... File

The rise of British power in India was not merely a conquest of territory; it was a complex "European venture of conquest and violence" built on the manipulation of indigenous information and knowledge systems . In his seminal work, Indian Society and the Making of the British Empire , C.A. Bayly challenges the traditional view of a stagnant India easily overtaken by a superior West, arguing instead that the British Empire was made possible by deeply integrating with—and eventually subordinating—existing Indian social and economic structures.

Indian Society and the Making of the British Empire: A Synthesis of Transformation Indian Society and the Making of the British Em...

One of the most radical shifts in understanding this period is the role of Indian capital. Far from being passive victims initially, Indian bankers and traders were critical drivers of the internal political economy. The rise of British power in India was

The Collaboration of Capital: Indian Merchants and the Company Indian Society and the Making of the British

The 19th century saw a deliberate attempt to Europeanize Indian society through legal and social reforms.

: Indian mercantile capitalists often allied with British revenue entrepreneurs, providing the international linkages and financing that fueled the East India Company's early growth.

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