ABSTRACT

Bengal’s traditional industries, once celebrated worldwide, largely decayed under the backwash effects of the British Industrial Revolution in the first half of the nineteenth century. Although colonial ambivalence is often cited as an explanation, this study also shows that a series of new industries emerged during this period.

The book reappraises the thesis of India’s deindustrialisation and discusses the development status of the traditional industries in the early nineteenth century, examines their technology, employment opportunities and marketing and, finally, analyses the underlying reasons for their decay. It offers a study of how traditional industries evolved into modern enterprises in a British colony, and contributes to the broader discussion on the global history of industrialisation.

This book will be of interest to scholars of Indian economic history as well as those who seek to understand the widespread effects of industrialisation, especially in a colonial context.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

Economic slowdown in the early modern age

Alternative explanations under the ‘great divergence’ hypothesis

chapter 3|36 pages

Coal mining

Dissemination of mineralogical knowledge and railway networking

chapter 4|30 pages

Iron smelting and its downstreams

Conflicts in the core–periphery relationship

chapter 5|43 pages

Jute processing

Triumph against Dundee

chapter 6|41 pages

Paper making

The changing attitude of colonial governance

chapter 7|38 pages

Tea plantations

British capital, tribal labour and wastelands in the Himalayas

chapter 8|11 pages

Major industries in 1858–1914

A summary

chapter 9|22 pages

Deindustrialisation in the nineteenth century

A myth or a reality?