The decision by the British Raj in 1917 to permit Indians into the Indian Army's officer corps was a key turning point in modern South Asian military history. This book analyzes the political, military, and ideological factors in the forgotten hundred-year-long debate culminating in this ruling.
The decision by the British Raj in 1917 to permit Indians into the Indian Army's officer corps was a key turning point in modern South Asian military history. This book analyzes the political, military, and ideological factors in the forgotten hundred-year-long debate culminating in this ruling.
Chandar S. Sundaram is instructor at the University of Victoria.
Inhaltsangabe
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 "Persistant Agitation"
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 "Persistant Agitation"
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