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OverviewThe first work of political theory published in modern India, Letters to an Indian Raja (1891) counseled Maharajas to foster liberal values and adopt constitutional government. Such reform would, it argued, make Indians freer and happier than they were under colonial rule, and thus allow the Native States to genuinely challenge the British. Accompanied by an extensive introductory essay by Rahul Sagar, a leading scholar of nineteenth century India, this carefully restored edition challenges the notion that Indian liberals merely borrowed their ideas from Britain and were eager to collaborate with the British Raj. On the contrary, it shows that India’s pioneering liberals sought to make the Native States less vulnerable to both domineering Britons and despotic Maharajas. -- . Full Product DetailsAuthor: Rahul SagarPublisher: Manchester University Press Imprint: Manchester University Press ISBN: 9781526190758ISBN 10: 1526190753 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 14 July 2026 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsIntroduction: The birth of Indian liberalism A note on the text Letters to an Indian Raja Appendices I. English and Native Rule in India (1868) II. Introduction to the first edition (1891) III. Preface to the second edition (1919) IV. Obituary in the Indian Spectator (1893) Index -- .Reviews‘Parmanand’s Letters, introduced with characteristic erudition by Rahul Sagar, open a fascinating new vista onto the vigour and creativity of modern Indian liberalism.’ – Cécile Laborde, University of Oxford ‘Rahul Sagar's The Birth of Indian Liberalism is a remarkable achievement. It recovers from near total oblivion a strikingly impressive life and a lengthy episode in the penetration of the idea of personal freedom into the often recalcitrant texture of the large proportion of the Indian subcontinent and its population which the British state chose not to govern directly. In doing so it restores agency and cognitive autonomy to a group of thinkers and political actors who have been scorned or forgotten but who identified the depth of the multicultural challenge to liberal aspirations and conceptions a century before they began to register in Canada or Britain and found their own way of confronting it. That challenge is as sharp and disconcerting in the Republics of India or Pakistan today as it was in the days of Sagar's hero.’ – John Dunn, University of Cambridge ‘In his edition of the first work of political theory published in India in the English language, Rahul Sagar revolutionises the history of South Asia’s political thinking. Just like liberals everywhere, liberals in India sought individual liberty; but Sagar shows that in India they did so against the community, allying with progressive monarchs with Indian states to do so. In restoring this forgotten argument, Sagar’s work transforms the categories of Indian political history and will inaugurate a rich historiography that pays attention to the multiple sites available to nineteenth-century Indians for reimagining domination and freedom.’ – Jon Wilson, Nanyang Technological University -- . Author InformationRahul Sagar is Global Network Associate Professor of Political Science at NYU Abu Dhabi -- . Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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