GS IAS Logo

< Previous | Contents | Next >

Approaches

Sources for the History of Modern India

Major Approaches to the History of Modern India


Chapter 1


Sources for the History of Modern India

An abundance of historical material is available for studying India from the mid-18th century to the mid-20th century. In constructing the history of modern India, priority needs to be given to archives. Archives refer to a collection of historical records and documents, usually primary source documents, i.e., those documents that have been created as a necessary part of some activity—administrative, legal, social or commercial. They are unique/original documents, not consciously written or created to convey information to a future generation. An important part of archives relating to modern India are the official records, i.e., the papers of government agencies at various levels.

1

The records of the East India Company provide a detailed account of trading conditions during the period 1600-1857. When the British crown took over the administration, it also kept a large variety and volume of official records. These records help historians to trace every important development stage-by-stage and follow the processes of decision-making and the psychology of the policy-makers. The records of the other European East India companies (the Portuguese, Dutch and French) are also useful for constructing the history of the 17th and 18th centuries. They are primarily important from the point of view of economic history, but much can be gathered from them about the political set-up as well.

There are also many contemporary and semi- contemporary works such as memoirs, biographies and travel accounts which give us interesting as well as useful glimpses into the history of the 18th and early 19th centuries. Newspapers and journals made their appearance in the later part of the 18th century, and they provide very valuable information on almost all aspects of the Indian society, especially in the 19th and 20th centuries. Other sources of modern Indian history include oral evidence, creative literature and paintings.

Archival Materials

There are four categories of official records (i) central government archives, (ii) state government archives, (iii) records of intermediate and subordinate authorities, and (iv) judicial records. Apart from these, there are private archives and archival sources available abroad.

 

Central Government ArchivesArchives of the State GovernmentsArchives of Three PresidenciesArchives of Other European PowersJudicial RecordsPublished ArchivesPrivate ArchivesForeign RepositoriesBiographies, Memoirs and Travel AccountsNewspapers and JournalsOral EvidenceCreative LiteraturePaintingSummaryColonial Approach/ HistoriographyNationalist Historiography/ ApproachMarxist Historiography/ ApproachSubaltern Approach/ HistoriographyCommunalist ApproachCambridge SchoolLiberal and Neo-Liberal InterpretationsFeminist HistoriographySummary