ABSTRACT

This book deals firstly with the economic and social conditions of life among the villagers, the artisans, and other workers in cities and towns of South India, and also with the new issues raised in India during the most momentous years of its history since the mutiny – the commercial and financial disturbances following the war, the sudden appearance of aggressive Trade Unionism, the famines of 1918 and 1920, the rise of the Home Rule agitation and the Non-Co-operation movement, and the coming into operation of the new Constitution of 1919. The author, who went to India in 1915 as Professor of Indian Economics in the University of Madras, was quickly brought into contact with heads of departments of the Provincial Government, was nominated by Lord Willingdon to the Madras Legislative Council, served in the Indian Board of Agriculture, and stayed on for a year in charge of the Madras Publicity Office. In these and in other ways he has had exceptional opportunities of getting insight into Indian problems from an unusual point of view.

chapter I|6 pages

Prologue

chapter II|9 pages

Bombay City and the Bombay Deccan

chapter III|8 pages

First Days in Madras

chapter IV|8 pages

The Geography of Madras City

chapter V|6 pages

Making Contacts

chapter VI|18 pages

Eruvellipet, A Delta Village

chapter VII|17 pages

Salem and Its Environs

chapter VIII|13 pages

Palni and Resettlement in Madura District

chapter IX|10 pages

The City of Madura

chapter X|5 pages

The Tinnevelly Cotton Area

chapter XI|6 pages

Kumbakonam

chapter XII|17 pages

The Nilgiris and the Palni Hills

chapter XIII

Coimbatore Agricultural College

chapter XIV|14 pages

Trichinopoly

chapter XV|8 pages

Cuddalore and Pondicherry

chapter XVI|12 pages

Trivandrum and Travancore

chapter XVII|27 pages

Cochin and Trichur

chapter XVIII|15 pages

Co-Operation in Conjiveram and Elsewhere

chapter XX|9 pages

Jute-Mills and the Managing Agent System

chapter XXII|6 pages

Peasants in Ganjam and the Godavari Delta

chapter XXIII|10 pages

Mysore State

chapter XXIV|6 pages

A Visit to Burma

chapter XXV|22 pages

Public Affairs in Madras, 1912—1922

chapter XXVI|7 pages

The Famines of 1918 and 1920

chapter XXVII|14 pages

The War and After

chapter XXVIII|17 pages

The New Constitution in Madras

chapter XXIX|16 pages

Labour Troubles

chapter XXXI|9 pages

The Madras Legislative Council, 1921-1922

chapter XXXII|8 pages

Epilogue