Skip to content
Welcome To Atlantic Books! Upto 75% off Across Various Categories.
Upto 75% off Across Various Categories.

Tensions in Rural Bengal: Landlords, Planters and Colonial Rule

by Chittrabrata Palit
Save 30% Save 30%
Original price Rs. 695.00
Original price Rs. 695.00 - Original price Rs. 695.00
Original price Rs. 695.00
Current price Rs. 487.00
Rs. 487.00 - Rs. 487.00
Current price Rs. 487.00

Ships in 1-2 Days

Free Shipping on orders above Rs. 1000

New Year Offer - Use Code ATLANTIC10 at Checkout for additional 10% OFF

Request Bulk Quantity Quote
Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9788175968080
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: Politics and Current Affairs
  • Publisher: Cambridge UP
  • Publisher Imprint: Foundation
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 232
  • Original Price: INR 695.0
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 500 grams

This book is a definitive work on agrarian change in colonial Bengal. It deals with a period which witnessed the first conflict between two alien systems of political economy. The British rule wanted to monetise and commercialise the more or less subsistence economy by various agencies of improvement and by linking it to the international market. But its revenue system, justice and police, the introduction of indigo planters and tenancy laws failed to transform the agrarian economy through the agency of landlords, planters and rich peasants. This was because of the colonial policy of maximising profits with minimum administration, leaving feudal forces to prevail upon the meager experiments in commercial agriculture. It only agitated the economy, creating tension and spurring revolt which finally led to the decline of zamindari, famine and depeasantisation, without any visible landmark of improvement.

The book is concerned with the confrontation of two alien political economies since the advent of colonial rule and its aftermath of tension, resistance and revolt. It illustrates how the contrived policy of converting a petite culture into the capitalist mode of production ultimately died down to a semi-feudal, semi-capitalist equilibrium. Since then it has been caught in the throes of an unfinished transformation. In the process several experiments were made by the British rule – permanent settlement of revenue with a landlord class, resumption of rent free tenures, introduction of indigo planters into the hinterland, regulation of rent and tenancy right, but all these only led up to agricultural contortions. The book would be of interest to students and scholars of Modern History of India and Bangladesh.