Lexington Books
Pages: 284
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-4985-7951-3 • Hardback • April 2019 • $142.00 • (£109.00)
978-1-4985-7952-0 • eBook • April 2019 • $134.50 • (£104.00)
Chandar S. Sundaram is a scholar of south Asian military history, who has written extensively on the Indian Army, the Indian National Army, and India's post-1947 peacekeeping operations. He presently resides in Victoria, Canada.
Introduction: Defining and Conceptualizing the Forgotten Indianization Debate
Chapter 1: Contexts of the Forgotten Indianization Debate, 1600–1914
Chapter 2: The Idea of Indianization and its Enemies, 1817–1898
Chapter 3: The Imperial Cadet Corps: its Formation and Pedagogy, 1900–1915
Chapter 4: Future Recruitment, Future Employment and the Future of the
Corps, 1902–1915
Chapter 5: War and the Window of Opportunity, 1914–1917
Chapter 6: Little Grace in the Giving: Indianization Policy, 1917–1940
Conclusion: Of “Psychological Moments” and “Persistent Agitation”
Credit is due to Sundaram for a thoroughly researched and well-argued book. The subject matter determines that this book is a top down empirical work. At a time when the fashion in history-writing tends towards an over-reliance on theories and a flimsy empirical base, this volume stands out as a painstakingly researched work with a complicated argument solidly grounded in a wealth of data. This volume will probably be the last word on the crucial issue of the Indianization of the Indian Army’s officer corps, which sounded the death knell for the Raj.
— Kaushik Roy, Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India, and Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO), Norway; Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research
This book is a valuable addition to any collection on the Indian Army.
— Pradeep Barua, University of Nebraska at Kearney; Journal of Asian Studies
Carefully researched and written, Indianization, the Officer Corps, and the Indian Army: The Forgotten Debate, 1817-1917, offers readers an insight into the important, and often forgotten ‘pre-history’ of the Indianization of the army. This book does an excellent job of exploring the tensions within a military establishment that at once championed a return to ‘traditional’ rulers and the incorporation of ‘martial races’ into the Indian army while riddled with a deep-seated racism and elitism that blocked any moves toward Indianization until absolutely required.— Erica Wald, University of London
• Short-listed, Society for Army Historical Research UK's Templer Medal Best First Book Prize, 2020 (2020)