Description

Book Synopsis
A history of the colonial tea plantation regime in Assam, which brought more than one million migrants to the region in northeast India, irrevocably changing the social landscape.

Trade Review
“The author’s prodigious work illuminates and deals with the vast consequences of creating the Empire’s Tea Garden and the settlement of over a million migrants into the tea plantations…. Read this deeply researched and wide-ranging book.” - Richard Ellis, Royal Society for Asian Affairs
“[P]athbreaking…. [T]his careful and thoughtful study is especially welcome…. Empire’s Garden provides a rich set of reflections on regions, regionalism, and the growth of nationalism in the modern world.” - Thomas R. Metcalf, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History
Empire’s Garden creates a rich, rewarding, and multi-stranded appreciation of Assam’s modern history. It greatly enriches understanding of the history and politics of Assam while at the same time giving fresh insights into the processes involved in the making of modern India and the incorporation of its diverse regions.” - David Arnold, The Economic History Review
“This book is an important work exploring the history of Assam through the
colonial era.” - Gareth Price, Pacific Affairs
“Jayeeta Sharma’s recent monograph brilliantly explores how the contradiction inherent in the integration of Assam with global capitalist modernity through the quasi-feudal agency of colonial capitalism transformed social and economic life in Bramhaputra Valley, one of the core regions of colonial Assam’s territories.” - Subho Basu, Labour/Le Travail
Empire’s Garden is a new departure for the historical study of Assam, extraordinarily wide-ranging, with important things to say not only about Assam but about India, South Asia, and themes ranging from colonialism, nationalism, and regionalism to ethnicity, elite formation, migration, and economic development. It will anchor histories of Assam for years to come.”—David Ludden, editor of Reading Subaltern Studies: Critical History, Contested Meaning and the Globalization of South Asia
“This rich history of Assam fills a void in scholarship. Assam is an area of South Asia that has received little attention from serious historians of the subcontinent, except those working on the tea industry. Jayeeta Sharma provides us with fascinating details of Assam’s history. More importantly, she relates local themes to larger issues of South Asian history: colonial ideologies of race and the importance of these ideologies to the political economy, the structure of colonial rule, the development of the public sphere, and the reformulation of identities under colonial circumstances. Empire’s Garden also helps us to understand the historical dimensions of contemporary conflicts in the region, without making the conflicts seem predetermined by what happened in the colonial period.”—Douglas E. Haynes, author of Rhetoric and Ritual in Colonial India: The Shaping of a Public Culture in Surat City, 1852–1928
Empire’s Garden creates a rich, rewarding, and multi-stranded appreciation of Assam’s modern history. It greatly enriches understanding of the history and politics of Assam while at the same time giving fresh insights into the processes involved in the making of modern India and the incorporation of its diverse regions.” -- David Arnold * Economic History Review *
“[P]athbreaking…. [T]his careful and thoughtful study is especially welcome…. Empire’s Garden provides a rich set of reflections on regions, regionalism, and the growth of nationalism in the modern world.” -- Thomas R. Metcalf * Journal of Interdisciplinary History *
“Jayeeta Sharma’s recent monograph brilliantly explores how the contradiction inherent in the integration of Assam with global capitalist modernity through the quasi-feudal agency of colonial capitalism transformed social and economic life in Bramhaputra Valley, one of the core regions of colonial Assam’s territories.” -- Subho Basu * Labour/Le Travail *
“The author’s prodigious work illuminates and deals with the vast consequences of creating the Empire’s Tea Garden and the settlement of over a million migrants into the tea plantations…. Read this deeply researched and wide-ranging book.” -- Richard Ellis * Royal Society for Asian Affairs *
“This book is an important work exploring the history of Assam through the colonial era.” -- Gareth Price * Pacific Affairs *

Table of Contents
Preface xi
Note on Orthography and Usage xiv
Introduction 1
Part I. Making a Garden 23
1. Nature's Jungle, Empire's Garden 25
2. Borderlands, Rice Eaters, and Tea Growers 49
3. Migrants in the Garden: Expanding the Frontier 79
Part II. Improving Assam, Making India 117
4. Old Lords and "Improving" Regimes 119
5. Bringing Progress, Restoring Culture 147
6. Language and Literature: Framing Identity 177
7. Contesting Publics: Raced Communities and Gendered History 205
Conclusion 234
Notes 243
Glossary 273
Bibliography 277
Index 311

Empires Garden

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    A Paperback by Jayeeta Sharma

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      Publisher: MD - Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 8/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780822350491, 978-0822350491
      ISBN10: 0822350491

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A history of the colonial tea plantation regime in Assam, which brought more than one million migrants to the region in northeast India, irrevocably changing the social landscape.

      Trade Review
      “The author’s prodigious work illuminates and deals with the vast consequences of creating the Empire’s Tea Garden and the settlement of over a million migrants into the tea plantations…. Read this deeply researched and wide-ranging book.” - Richard Ellis, Royal Society for Asian Affairs
      “[P]athbreaking…. [T]his careful and thoughtful study is especially welcome…. Empire’s Garden provides a rich set of reflections on regions, regionalism, and the growth of nationalism in the modern world.” - Thomas R. Metcalf, The Journal of Interdisciplinary History
      Empire’s Garden creates a rich, rewarding, and multi-stranded appreciation of Assam’s modern history. It greatly enriches understanding of the history and politics of Assam while at the same time giving fresh insights into the processes involved in the making of modern India and the incorporation of its diverse regions.” - David Arnold, The Economic History Review
      “This book is an important work exploring the history of Assam through the
      colonial era.” - Gareth Price, Pacific Affairs
      “Jayeeta Sharma’s recent monograph brilliantly explores how the contradiction inherent in the integration of Assam with global capitalist modernity through the quasi-feudal agency of colonial capitalism transformed social and economic life in Bramhaputra Valley, one of the core regions of colonial Assam’s territories.” - Subho Basu, Labour/Le Travail
      Empire’s Garden is a new departure for the historical study of Assam, extraordinarily wide-ranging, with important things to say not only about Assam but about India, South Asia, and themes ranging from colonialism, nationalism, and regionalism to ethnicity, elite formation, migration, and economic development. It will anchor histories of Assam for years to come.”—David Ludden, editor of Reading Subaltern Studies: Critical History, Contested Meaning and the Globalization of South Asia
      “This rich history of Assam fills a void in scholarship. Assam is an area of South Asia that has received little attention from serious historians of the subcontinent, except those working on the tea industry. Jayeeta Sharma provides us with fascinating details of Assam’s history. More importantly, she relates local themes to larger issues of South Asian history: colonial ideologies of race and the importance of these ideologies to the political economy, the structure of colonial rule, the development of the public sphere, and the reformulation of identities under colonial circumstances. Empire’s Garden also helps us to understand the historical dimensions of contemporary conflicts in the region, without making the conflicts seem predetermined by what happened in the colonial period.”—Douglas E. Haynes, author of Rhetoric and Ritual in Colonial India: The Shaping of a Public Culture in Surat City, 1852–1928
      Empire’s Garden creates a rich, rewarding, and multi-stranded appreciation of Assam’s modern history. It greatly enriches understanding of the history and politics of Assam while at the same time giving fresh insights into the processes involved in the making of modern India and the incorporation of its diverse regions.” -- David Arnold * Economic History Review *
      “[P]athbreaking…. [T]his careful and thoughtful study is especially welcome…. Empire’s Garden provides a rich set of reflections on regions, regionalism, and the growth of nationalism in the modern world.” -- Thomas R. Metcalf * Journal of Interdisciplinary History *
      “Jayeeta Sharma’s recent monograph brilliantly explores how the contradiction inherent in the integration of Assam with global capitalist modernity through the quasi-feudal agency of colonial capitalism transformed social and economic life in Bramhaputra Valley, one of the core regions of colonial Assam’s territories.” -- Subho Basu * Labour/Le Travail *
      “The author’s prodigious work illuminates and deals with the vast consequences of creating the Empire’s Tea Garden and the settlement of over a million migrants into the tea plantations…. Read this deeply researched and wide-ranging book.” -- Richard Ellis * Royal Society for Asian Affairs *
      “This book is an important work exploring the history of Assam through the colonial era.” -- Gareth Price * Pacific Affairs *

      Table of Contents
      Preface xi
      Note on Orthography and Usage xiv
      Introduction 1
      Part I. Making a Garden 23
      1. Nature's Jungle, Empire's Garden 25
      2. Borderlands, Rice Eaters, and Tea Growers 49
      3. Migrants in the Garden: Expanding the Frontier 79
      Part II. Improving Assam, Making India 117
      4. Old Lords and "Improving" Regimes 119
      5. Bringing Progress, Restoring Culture 147
      6. Language and Literature: Framing Identity 177
      7. Contesting Publics: Raced Communities and Gendered History 205
      Conclusion 234
      Notes 243
      Glossary 273
      Bibliography 277
      Index 311

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