ABSTRACT

Politics and culture are organically related in the city of Calcutta. The period (1940s to 1950s), was chaotic and turbulent, yet, this was also a time of significant creativity in literature,  art, films and music in the city. This is an unusual feature of any city but is interestingly characteristic of Calcutta. The originality of the work lies in blending poetry with historical writing, retaining the essence of both forms against the backdrop of the tumultuous events of the critical decades, as against the entire historical period of a city. This historical method together with twenty-one papers give the reader a sense of the pulse of this complex city ‘emerging creatively and chaotically from its colonial past’.

chapter one|12 pages

Introduction

Calcutta in History and Historiography

part one|50 pages

Ordering the Urban Space

chapter three|24 pages

Calcutta on the Threshold of the 1940s

chapter four|21 pages

A City in Mourning

7 August 1941

part two|168 pages

War, Famine and Unrest

chapter five|28 pages

The Elusive Chase

‘War Rumour’ in Calcutta during the Second World War 1

chapter six|28 pages

Japan Attacks

chapter seven|30 pages

When Mill Sirens Rang Out Danger

The Calcutta Jute Mill Belt in the Second World War

chapter eight|26 pages

Protest and Politics

Story of Calcutta Tram Workers 1940–1947

part three|128 pages

Communal Relations: Solidarities and Violence

chapter eleven|2 pages

On a Birthday (1946)

chapter twelve|32 pages

A Different Calcutta

INA Trials and Hindu-Muslim Solidarity in 1945 and 1946

chapter fourteen|21 pages

A City Feeding on Itself

Riots, Testimonies and Literatures of the 1940s in Calcutta

chapter fifteen|18 pages

Calcutta and its Struggle for Peace

Anti-Communal Resistance, 1946–47

part four|116 pages

Postcolonial Transition

chapter sixteen|27 pages

Calcutta, a City in Transition

Expectations and Anxieties of Freedom, 1947–50 1

chapter seventeen|19 pages

Visually Imagining the City

Urban Planning in 1950s Calcutta and Surjyatoran

chapter eighteen|27 pages

Building Bijaygarh

A Microhistory of Refugee Squatting in Calcutta 1

chapter nineteen|25 pages

Becoming a Minority Community

Calcutta’s Muslims after Partition

chapter twenty-one|14 pages

Time in Place

Urban Culture in Decades of Crisis