Dialogue and History

  Preface
  Acknowledgements
  Transliteration and Other Conventions
  Maps

 expand sectionIntroduction
 collapse section1. To Fix the People to Their Respective Villages
 The Transformation of the East India Company
 The Battle of Pullalur and the Naturalization of the British on the Subcontinent
 Mapping the Jagir as a Form of Self-Deception
 Temple Conflicts
 Village Disputes
 The Company as Tax Collector in the Jagir
 Collaborative Activities to Produce a Past for the Subcontinent
 The Nature of the "Mirasidar Insurrection" of 1795-96
 Amorality as Strategy, Amorality as Decay
 Land and Society; Mirasidars and Dubashes
 Mirasidar and Pannaiyal Survival Strategies
 Rural Relations: Mirasidars, Pannaiyals, Padiyals, Renters, and Courts
 The 1785 "Paraiyar Insurrection"
 Company Frustrations and Resulting New Tax Schemes
 Seeking to Reduce Dubash Power: The Appointment of Place
 Manipulating Company Values and Institutions
 Describing the "Amoral" Dubash and the "Wise" British
 Pannaiyal and Padiyal Protest Strategies as a Way to
 New Conceptions of Loyalty out of Dependence on the British
 The "Insurrection" as a Utopian Arena
 Analyzing the "Insurrection"
 Notes
 expand section2. Using the Past to Create the Future
 expand section3. The Rise and Consolidation of the Chingleput Mirasidars
 expand section4. From Slaves to the Original Dravidians
 expand section5. Conclusion

  Abbreviations
 expand sectionBibliography

collapse section Collapse All | Expand All expand section