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Political Change in an Indian State: Mysore 1917-1955
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“Mysore, with an area about the size of Scotland and ruled by the most enlightened of princely autocracies, is the best example of the failure of the princely order to survive the end of the British Raj. It is also the only Princely State, which had a well-developed Congress party before the independence. This volume is the first full-length study on this major region of India. Unusually broad in scope, it traces the course of political change in Mysore from 1917, when non-officials began to seek power from an autocratic regime, to 1955, when the Congress party that had seized power in 1947, established itself as?the?state’s?central?political?force. It also examines the integration of the many, isolated rural political arenas into an organically whole political system at several levels – national, state, district and local – are discussed to uncover the different motivations underlying the political behaviour. Besides, it presents the first statewide examination of the changing patterns of social organisation among Mysore’s two dominant castes, and discusses the interaction of social and political change there. This study of Mysore has significance beyond itself too. For it identifies points of correspondence between the Mysore story and that of the rest of India and thereby, enables us to see that the experiences of people in the two Indias – Princely and British – are part of a common fabric, however loosely the separate strands?may?fit?together. About the Author James Manor is the Emeka Anyaoku Professor Emeritus of Commonwealth Studies?in?the?School?of?Advanced?Study,?University?of?London.
“Mysore, with an area about the size of Scotland and ruled by the most enlightened of princely autocracies, is the best example of the failure of the princely order to survive the end of the British Raj. It is also the only Princely State, which had a well-developed Congress party before the independence. This volume is the first full-length study on this major region of India. Unusually broad in scope, it traces the course of political change in Mysore from 1917, when non-officials began to seek power from an autocratic regime, to 1955, when the Congress party that had seized power in 1947, established itself as?the?state’s?central?political?force. It also examines the integration of the many, isolated rural political arenas into an organically whole political system at several levels – national, state, district and local – are discussed to uncover the different motivations underlying the political behaviour. Besides, it presents the first statewide examination of the changing patterns of social organisation among Mysore’s two dominant castes, and discusses the interaction of social and political change there. This study of Mysore has significance beyond itself too. For it identifies points of correspondence between the Mysore story and that of the rest of India and thereby, enables us to see that the experiences of people in the two Indias – Princely and British – are part of a common fabric, however loosely the separate strands?may?fit?together. About the Author James Manor is the Emeka Anyaoku Professor Emeritus of Commonwealth Studies?in?the?School?of?Advanced?Study,?University?of?London.
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