ABSTRACT

First published in 1937, India captures the tense and tumultuous developments in India that would eventually result in her freedom a decade later. The author, unaware of this future of freedom, still holds hope for India’s continued existence under the British Commonwealth even as she meticulously records India’s vacillating constitutional status over several Round Table Conferences. The Conferences reveal what the author considers India’s greatest problem: protracted strife within various religious and social communities. The casual racism and the superiority complex spread across the book is a reminder that the author thinks and talks like a coloniser, but if one can get past that, the book will prove to be an engaging read with its interesting anecdotes, astute observations, and a failed prediction. Students of postcolonial studies, history, ethnic studies, colonial history, and journalism will greatly benefit from reading this book.

part 17I

chapter Chapter One|5 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter Two|7 pages

The Problem

chapter Chapter Three|9 pages

First Round Table Conference 1930–1931

chapter Chapter Four|18 pages

The Conference at Work

chapter Chapter Five|17 pages

Second Round Table Conference 1931

chapter Chapter Six|15 pages

With Mr. Gandhi

chapter Chapter Seven|10 pages

The Conference Ends

chapter Chapter Eight|6 pages

Experiment in Journalism

chapter Chapter Nine|16 pages

Third Round Table Conference 1932

chapter Chapter Ten

Joint Parliamentary Committee 1933

part 129II|61 pages

chapter Chapter Eleven|7 pages

In India

chapter Chapter Twelve|5 pages

Mr. Gandhi Again

chapter Chapter Thirteen|9 pages

India at Work

chapter Chapter Fourteen|12 pages

Congress Meets in Bombay

chapter Chapter Fifteen|7 pages

India at the Polls

chapter Chapter Sixteen|12 pages

Plaintiffs and Defendants

chapter Chapter Seventeen|7 pages

A Fresh Attempt

part 191III|102 pages

chapter Chapter Eighteen|9 pages

The Women of India

chapter Chapter Nineteen|12 pages

Youth

chapter Chapter Twenty|7 pages

The Peasant

chapter Chapter Twenty-One|5 pages

The Industrial Worker

chapter Chapter Twenty-Two|16 pages

The Press

chapter Chapter Twenty-Three|8 pages

The Cinema

chapter Chapter Twenty-Four|4 pages

The Radio

chapter Chapter Twenty-Five|11 pages

The British in India

chapter Chapter Twenty-Six|4 pages

The “Foreigner” in India

chapter Chapter Twenty-Seven|19 pages

Legislators of the Future

chapter Chapter Twenty-Eight|5 pages

The Future