Stein, Burton : University of London
This history provides an original, succinct but sustained narrative of the development of Indian society, culture
and polity from 7000 BC to the present. It throws new light on past and currently vexing questions, and relates
contemporary India, with its promise and its problems, to a rich and varied past.
The text is informed throughout by Professor Stein´s personal vision and, in particular, his special interests
in political and social development and the oft-neglected South.
The book opens with an outline of the main argument. The author introduces his major themes, showing the interactions
and tensions in Indian history between communities and states, between cultures and politics, and between the region
and the outside world. The narrative which follows incorporates critically the accumulated findings of recent research
on the whole range of Indian history and prehistory, considering the nature of premodern as well as contemporary
politics, and examines the origins and consequences of the Mughal and British conquests as well as controversial
recent issues, such as India´s national integrity, its commitments to secularism and to improving the condition
of women.
The author´s insights reveal an in-depth understanding of India´s current problems and possibilities
as it moves into its second half-century of independence. Illustrated with maps and photographs, and containing
chronologies and a guide to further reading, A History of India will be valued for its vivid narrative and trenchant
analysis.
Series Editor´s Preface.
Part I:
1. Introduction.
The Physical Setting.
The Social Setting.
Resituating Communities and States.
Historian´s Choice.
Part II: Ancient India:
2. Ancient Days.
The Pre-formation of Indian Civilization.
Vedic Culture.
Political and Religious Developments.
Religion in the Later Vedic Period.
The Nature of the Mauryan Kingdom.
Toward the Classical Pattern.
Early Hinduism.
Developments in the South.
The Age of the Early Empires.
The Gupta Classical Pattern.
The Classical Pattern Elaborated and Extended: the South.
Part III: Medieval and Early Modern India:
3. Medieval India.
Medieval Kingdoms.
The Role of the Southern Kingdoms.
The Advent of Islam.
The Indian Development of Islam.
The Deccan and the South.
Vijayanagara.
States and Communities.
4. Early Modern India.
The Mughal Empire.
The Wars of the Mughal Succession.
The Last Act of the Mughals.
The Maratha Moment.
The Shadow of Europe.
5. The East India Company.
The Joint Trajectory of Development.
The Company Perpetuates the Past.
The Emergence of a New Order.
Mutiny and Revolt.
Late Company Rule.
Part IV: Contemporary South Asia:
6. The Crown Replaces the Company.
After the Mutiny.
The Rule of the Raj.
The Political Economy of the Late Nineteenth Century.
Cultural Change, Education and New Classes.
The Politicization of Class, Caste and Gender.
´Toward Freedom´.
Two Types of Nationalism.
Early Congress and its Adversaries.
War, Sacrifice and Mass Political Mobilization.
Imperialism´s Paradoxical Enemy.
The First Campaigns. Between Campaigns.
Conditions for a New Politics.
7. Gandhi´s Triumph.
Civil Disobedience.
The Left in Politics.
The Right Prevails.
War and the Last Act Begins.
The Bitter Victory of Partition.
8. New States, Old Nations.
The Promises of Independence.
Pakistan in Parallel.
The Green Revolution: Promise of Plenty.
Environmental Problems, Old and New.
The Condition of Women: Broken Promises.
Communal Politics: Shattered Pluralism.
India and the World.
Promises Kept, Promises Broken.
Burton Stein, 1st August 1926-26th April 1996.
Glossary.
Persons.
Index.