📌 Snapshot
- Establishes that India's modern social structure was decisively shaped by the paradoxical experience of British colonialism — liberal ideas arrived alongside the denial of liberty.
- Defines and distinguishes colonialism, capitalism, nation-state and nationalism as a linked conceptual cluster (NCERT §1.1).
- Focuses on two structural changes — industrialisation and urbanisation — and shows that in colonial India they followed a pattern opposite to Britain's (de-industrialisation, decline of old centres, rise of port cities, reverse migration into agriculture).
- Uses the tea plantations of Assam as a case of coercive colonial industry, and contrasts it with state-led industrialisation in independent India (Bhilai, Bokaro, Rourkela, Durgapur).
- High-yield for CUET because of dense datable facts (Census 1911, 1951, 2011), named cities, named Acts, and named sociologists (M.S.A. Rao, Sumit Sarkar, Anthony Giddens, Louis Wirth).
📖 Detailed Notes
2.1 Core concepts
- Understanding modern India requires grasping its colonial past, because modern ideas and institutions reached India through a colonial framework that was simultaneously liberal in rhetoric and authoritarian in practice. The colonial encounter brought democratic rhetoric, civil-service rules and modern law alongside racial discrimination, expropriation of land and suppression of dissent — a contradiction that shaped every Indian institution from the bureaucracy to the university (NCERT Introduction, p. 2).
- The English language exemplifies colonialism's paradox — it is both a privilege that excludes the majority and, for Dalits and other traditionally excluded groups, a door to opportunities formerly closed by Sanskritic/Persianate gatekeeping (NCERT p. 3).
- Colonialism = the establishment of rule by one country over another; modern western colonialism had the greatest global impact because it was driven by industrial capitalism and a world-market (NCERT §1.1, p. 4).
- Unlike pre-capitalist conquerors who merely extracted tribute without disturbing the economic base, capitalist British colonialism directly interfered with land laws (Permanent Settlement, Ryotwari, Mahalwari), choice of crops (indigo, cotton, opium for the China trade), manufacturing, distribution, and even forests (Forest Acts that displaced pastoralists and shifting cultivators) — citing Alavi and Shanin 1982 (NCERT §1.1, p. 4).
- Colonialism caused large-scale movement of people — e.g., tribal labour from Jharkhand to the Assam tea plantations; middle-class professionals from Bengal and Madras Presidencies to other regions; indentured labourers to Mauritius, the Caribbean, Fiji, East Africa, Malaya and South Africa (today's "people of Indian origin" / NRI diaspora) (NCERT §1.1, p. 5; Box 1.1).
- Box 1.1: From 1834 till 1920, ships left Indian ports carrying labourers (across religions, gender, classes, castes) to work for a minimum of five years on Mauritius plantations; main recruiting districts in Bihar — Patna, Gaya, Arrah, Saran, Tirhoot, Champaran, Munger, Bhagalpur, Purnea (NCERT Box 1.1, p. 5).
- Some colonial changes were deliberate, others unintended — e.g., western education was meant to produce loyal English-speaking administrators (Macaulay's Minute, 1835) but instead nurtured nationalist and anti-colonial consciousness in figures like Gokhale, Tilak, Gandhi and Nehru (NCERT §1.1, p. 5).
- Capitalism is defined as an economic system in which the means of production are privately owned and organised to accumulate profits within a market system; its defining features are dynamism, innovation, and a global character — it cannot operate within a single country (NCERT §1.1, p. 5).
- Nation-state: a state with sovereign power within a defined territory whose people are citizens of a single nation; closely linked to nationalism, which holds that any people have the right to be free and exercise sovereign power — making colonialism and nationalism inherently contradictory ideologies (NCERT §1.1, pp. 5–6).
- Industrialisation = emergence of machine production based on inanimate power sources (steam, electricity, later oil and electricity). In industrial societies a large majority work in factories, offices or shops, not agriculture; over 90% of people in the west live in towns and cities (NCERT §1.2, p. 6).
- Urbanisation = growth of towns and cities, the shift of population from rural to urban settlements. Urbanisation and industrialisation usually go together but not always. Britain (Giddens 2001): in 1800 under 20% lived in towns above 10,000; by 1900, 74% did; London grew from 1.1 million (1800) to over 7 million (1900) — the largest city ever seen at the time (NCERT §1.2, p. 6).
- In India the same British industrialisation de-industrialised local production: Indian cotton and silk exports collapsed before Manchester competition; Surat and Masulipatnam declined while Bombay and Madras grew; Thanjavur, Dhaka and Murshidabad lost their courts, artisans and gentry as Mughal/Nawabi power crumbled (NCERT §1.2, p. 7).
- Sarkar (1983): urban luxury manufactures of Dacca and Murshidabad collapsed first; village crafts in the interior survived longer and were hit seriously only with the spread of railways (NCERT p. 7).
- Reverse migration: unlike Britain where industrialisation pulled people to cities, Indian industrialisation initially pushed more people into agriculture (Census of India Report 1911, Vol. 1, p. 408 — Box 1.2): cheap European piecegoods and factories destroyed many village industries; high prices of agricultural produce led village artisans to abandon hereditary crafts for agriculture (NCERT Box 1.2, p. 7). The result was an over-crowded rural sector and a thinning artisan class.
- Box 1.3 (Mukherjee 1979): British substitutes — land ownership (zamindari) and English education — were inadequate because the first was unconnected with agricultural productivity (zamindars merely collected rent) and the second with mainstream Indian cultural traditions; result — zamindars became "parasites in land" and English-educated graduates became "job hunters" (NCERT Box 1.3, p. 8).
- Coastal/port cities Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai were favoured as the prime link between Britain (the economic core) and colonised India (the periphery) — concrete expressions of global capitalism. Inland Mughal cities (Delhi, Agra, Lahore, Hyderabad) declined relatively as the export-import axis shifted to the coast (NCERT §1.2, p. 8).
- Specific exports: by 1900 over three-quarters of India's raw cotton was shipped through Bombay; Calcutta exported jute to Dundee; Madras sent coffee, sugar, indigo dyes and cotton to Britain (NCERT §1.2, p. 8).
- Kolkata's origin: in 1690 the English merchant Job Charnock leased three villages (Kolikata, Gobindapur, Sutanuti) by the river Hugli; Fort William was built in 1698, and the cleared open area around it became the Maidan — core of the emerging city (NCERT §1.2, p. 8).
- Box 1.4 (Dutt 1993) — model of the South Asian colonial city: a European town with spacious bungalows, planned streets, clubs, race and golf courses, with water, electricity and sewage links — and a separate "native town" with restricted access to these facilities. This dual urban form survives today as the cantonment/civil-lines vs old-city divide (NCERT Box 1.4, p. 8).
- Tea plantations (Assam): tea industry began in India in 1851; by 1903 it employed 4,79,000 permanent and 93,000 temporary workers. Because Assam was sparsely populated, labour had to be imported; planters used fraud and coercion under the Transport of Native Labourers Act (No. III) of 1863 of Bengal (amended 1865, 1870, 1873). Colonial administrators acknowledged that laws in a colony did not need to follow democratic norms of Britain (NCERT Box 1.5, p. 9).
- Box 1.6 (Phukun 2005): British planters in Parbatpuri lived in luxury — sprawling bungalows on wooden stilts, lawns, armies of malis, bawarchis and bearers, imported goods (cast-iron bathtubs, Nottingham lace) brought up by steamer — a microcosm of the racial economy (NCERT Box 1.6, p. 10).
- Industrialisation in independent India: nationalists treated economic exploitation as a central issue; the Swadeshi movement built loyalty to the national economy; rapid industrialisation was viewed as the path to growth + social equity, with stress on heavy and machine-making industries, expansion of the public sector, and a large cooperative sector — the Nehru-Mahalanobis model embodied in the Second Five-Year Plan (NCERT §1.2, p. 10).
- New industrial towns post-Independence: Bokaro, Bhilai, Rourkela, Durgapur — public-sector steel and power townships set up with Soviet, German and British collaboration (NCERT Activity 1.3, p. 10).
- Urbanisation in independent India — M.S.A. Rao (1974) identifies three patterns of urban impact on villages (Box 1.7, p. 11): (i) villages from which people migrate to far-off cities like Bombay/Calcutta (Madhopur example: 77 of 298 households have migrants, ~75% remit regularly); (ii) villages near industrial towns like Bhilai — some are uprooted, others have land partly acquired and receive immigrant workers; (iii) villages surrounding metropolitan cities — some fully absorbed, others have land used for urban development (NCERT Box 1.7, p. 11).
- Urban statistics: 1951 — 17.29% urban (62.44 million people in 2,843 towns); 2011 — 31.16% urban (377.10 million in 7,935 towns). Decennial growth rate of urban population was 41.42% in 1951 and 31.80% in 2011; the rate declined during 1981–2001 and marginally increased in 2011. For the first time since Independence, the absolute increase in population is more in urban than in rural areas (NCERT §1.2, p. 13).
- Conclusion: industrialisation and urbanisation imply changes not just in production systems and density of settlement but also in "a way of life" — Louis Wirth, 1938 (NCERT Conclusion, p. 13). Urbanism — anonymity, secondary relations, the cash nexus, rationalisation of time — is therefore a cultural fact, not just a demographic one.
2.2 Definitions to memorise
| Term | Definition | Page |
|---|---|---|
| Colonialism | Rule by one country over another; capitalist colonialism interfered with the economic base | 4 |
| Capitalism | Private-ownership economic system organised for profit accumulation in a market | 5 |
| Nation-state | State with sovereign power over a defined territory whose people are citizens of one nation | 5–6 |
| Nationalism | Principle that any people has the right to be free and exercise sovereign power | 6 |
| Industrialisation | Machine production based on inanimate power sources (steam, electricity) | 6 |
| Urbanisation | Movement of population to towns/cities and the growth of urban settlements | 6 |
| De-industrialisation | Decline of indigenous manufacturing under colonial trade pressure | 7 |
| Urbanism (Wirth, 1938) | Urban "way of life" — anonymity, secondary ties, cash nexus | 13 |
| Pre-capitalist conquest | Tribute extraction without disturbance of the economic base | 4 |
| Public sector | State-owned industrial enterprises central to post-Independence planning | 10 |
| Swadeshi | Movement promoting indigenous goods and economic self-reliance | 10 |
| Indentured labour | Bonded migrant labour exported from India 1834–1920 (Mauritius, Caribbean, Fiji) | 5 |
| Permanent Settlement (implied) | Zamindari land system creating "parasites in land" (Mukherjee 1979) | 8 |
| Reverse migration | Shift of population into agriculture caused by colonial industrial pressure | 7 |
| Maidan | Cleared open ground around Fort William, Calcutta, after 1698 | 8 |
| Coolie / kangani | Recruitment systems for indentured plantation labour | 5, 9 |
| Cantonment | British military-residential zone of a colonial city | 8 |
| Princely state (implied) | Indirectly-ruled native kingdoms under British paramountcy | 2 |
| Plantation | Capitalist agricultural enterprise (tea, coffee, indigo) using imported labour | 9 |
| Cooperative sector | Non-state, non-private collective enterprises encouraged by Nehruvian planning | 10 |
| Census of India 1911 | Primary source for the "reverse migration" thesis | 7 |
| Megalopolis (implied) | Very large urban agglomeration (e.g. London 1900, Mumbai today) | 6 |
| Periphery (world-system) | Region producing primary goods for the industrial core | 8 |
| Urbanisation Rate vs Urban Share | Two different ratios — distinguish them carefully | 13 |
| Cash crop | Crop grown primarily for export markets (cotton, indigo, jute, tea) | 4, 8 |
2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember
- The opening visual on "Different dimensions of modernity" (p. 2) — sets up the paradox-of-modernity frame.
- Photographs of Jaipur, Chennai and Mumbai (pp. 6–7) — illustrating contrasts between pre-colonial princely-state and colonial port cities.
- The tea plantation imagery and the woman plucking tea leaves (p. 9) — visual anchor for the Assam tea-labour discussion.
- Box 1.4: Model of the South Asian colonial city (Dutt 1993, p. 8) — European town vs. native town spatial dualism, with infrastructural asymmetry baked in.
- Two charts on p. 12: (i) Urban Population & No. of UA/Towns 1951–2011 growing steadily from 62 m / 2,843 → 377 m / 7,935; (ii) Per cent and Decennial Growth Rate of Urban Population 1951–2011 — % share rising but decennial growth rate showing an overall declining trend with a marginal 2011 uptick.
- Indentured-migration map (implicit, Box 1.1) — Mauritius, Caribbean, Fiji, South Africa, East Africa, Malaya as destinations.
- Map of post-Independence industrial townships (implicit) — Bhilai (MP), Bokaro (Jharkhand), Rourkela (Odisha), Durgapur (West Bengal).
2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points
- Students assume urbanisation always follows industrialisation — but "they often do occur together but not always so" (Britain yes; colonial India initially reverse — push into agriculture). NTA loves this inversion.
- Confusing Job Charnock's three villages (Kolikata, Gobindapur, Sutanuti) with later names; the city is Kolkata/Calcutta, not Bombay.
- Tea industry start year = 1851 (not 1863; 1863 is the Transport of Native Labourers Act).
- 1951 urban share = 17.29%, 2011 = 31.16%. Decennial growth rate in 1951 was 41.42%, in 2011 only 31.80% — the share grew but the rate slowed; distractor questions flip these.
- Pre-capitalist conquerors did not interfere with the economic base (they only took tribute) — opposite of capitalist colonialism. Easy trap to invert.
- "Urbanism as a way of life" is Louis Wirth, 1938, not Giddens, Sarkar or Rao.
- The three Rao (1974) types of urban impact are about villages affected by cities, not types of cities themselves.
- Indentured labour migration ran from 1834 to 1920 — neither 1858 (Crown Rule) nor 1947 (Independence).
- Mukherjee 1979 speaks of zamindars as "parasites in land" — not "parasites in labour".
- Fort William built in 1698, not 1690; 1690 is the lease year of the three villages.
- Capitalism's defining trait is global character, not just private property — pre-modern systems also had private holdings but lacked the global market.
2.5 Thinkers / Theories
| Thinker / Source | Key Contribution | Page |
|---|---|---|
| Alavi & Shanin (1982) | Distinction between pre-capitalist tribute extraction and capitalist interference with the economic base | §1.1, p. 4 |
| Sumit Sarkar (1983) | Urban luxury manufactures of Dacca/Murshidabad collapsed first; village crafts hit hardest by railways | §1.2, p. 7 |
| Census of India Report 1911 (Vol. 1) | Documented the reverse migration into agriculture in colonial India | Box 1.2, p. 7 |
| Ramkrishna Mukherjee (1979) | Land + English education as inadequate British substitutes; zamindars as 'parasites in land' | Box 1.3, p. 8 |
| Ashok K. Dutt (1993) | Model of the South Asian colonial city — European town + native town dualism | Box 1.4, p. 8 |
| Job Charnock (1690) | Leased Kolikata, Gobindapur and Sutanuti — origin of Calcutta | §1.2, p. 8 |
| Phukun (2005) | Ethnographic recovery of British planters' lifestyle in Parbatpuri (Assam) | Box 1.6, p. 10 |
| M.S.A. Rao (1974) | Three patterns of urban impact on Indian villages | Box 1.7, p. 11 |
| Anthony Giddens (2001) | Supplied the Britain urbanisation data — under 20% (1800) to 74% (1900) | §1.2, p. 6 |
| Louis Wirth (1938) | 'Urbanism as a Way of Life' — urbanisation is also cultural change | Conclusion, p. 13 |
| Swadeshi nationalism | Built loyalty to the national economy; antecedent of post-1947 import-substitution | §1.2, p. 10 |
| Nehru-Mahalanobis Model (implied) | Public-sector-led heavy industrialisation; Bhilai, Bokaro, Rourkela, Durgapur | §1.2, p. 10 |
| Transport of Native Labourers Act 1863 (Bengal) | Legal cover for fraudulent recruitment of Assam tea labour | Box 1.5, p. 9 |
| Macaulay's Minute on Education 1835 (implied) | Source of English education that backfired into nationalist consciousness | §1.1, p. 5 |
| Indentured-labour migration 1834–1920 | Origin of the Indian diaspora in Mauritius, Caribbean, Fiji, South Africa | Box 1.1, p. 5 |
🎯 Practice MCQs
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Q1. According to NCERT, which best distinguishes British capitalist colonialism in India from earlier pre-capitalist conquests?
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Answer: B
Q2. Industrialisation is defined as:
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Answer: B
Q3. Consider the following statements about urbanisation and industrialisation in colonial India: I. Like Britain, India's early industrialisation pulled people from agriculture into cities. II. Old urban centres like Surat and Masulipatnam declined while Bombay and Madras grew. III. Towns like Thanjavur, Dhaka and Murshidabad lost their courts and consequently many artisans and court gentry. Which is/are correct?
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Answer: B
Statement I is wrong — in India the same British industrialisation initially led to *more* people moving *into* agriculture.
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Q4. Match the cities/regions with the colonial export/role: | A (City) | B (Colonial role) | |---|---| | 1. Bombay | (i) Exported jute to Dundee | | 2. Calcutta | (ii) Sent coffee, sugar, indigo dyes and cotton to Britain | | 3. Madras | (iii) Three-quarters of India's raw cotton was shipped through it by 1900 | | 4. Assam | (iv) Centre of the tea industry (began 1851) |
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Answer: A
Q5. Under which Act was the recruitment of labourers for the Assam tea gardens carried out for years (Box 1.5)?
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Answer: A
Q6. According to Box 1.7 (M.S.A. Rao 1974), which is NOT one of the three situations of urban impact on Indian villages?
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Answer: D
Q7. Assertion (A): In India, the initial impact of British industrialisation led to *more* people moving into agriculture, not into cities. Reason (R): Cheap European piecegoods and factories destroyed many village industries, and high prices of agricultural produce led village artisans to abandon their hereditary crafts.
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Answer: A
Q8. "Urbanism as a way of life" — invoked's conclusion — is associated with:
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Answer: D
Q9. Between 1951 and 2011 India's urban share of population moved from:
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Answer: A
41.42% and 31.80% are *decennial growth rates* of urban population, not urban shares.
Q10. In 1690, the English merchant Job Charnock leased three villages by the Hugli to set up a trading post. They were:
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Answer: A
Q11. Indentured Indian labour was exported overseas during the period:
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Answer: B
Q12. Which of the following post-Independence industrial townships is NOT named in this chapter?
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Answer: D
Bhilai, Bokaro, Rourkela and Durgapur are the four named.
Q13. According to Mukherjee (1979) cited in Box 1.3, the British-introduced zamindari system turned landlords into:
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Answer: B
Q14. Fort William, the nucleus of British Calcutta, was constructed in:
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Answer: B
Q15. The tea industry began in India in the year:
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Answer: B
1863 is the Transport of Native Labourers Act; 1903 is the year by which the industry employed over 5.7 lakh workers.
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