The Ruling Caste: Imperial Lives in the Victorian Raj
Material type:
- 9780712665650
- 954.03/GIL
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | 954.03/GIL |
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
In 1900 just over a thousand British civil servants ruled a population of nearly 300 million people spread over a territory now covered by India, Pakistan, Burma and Bangladesh. In its time, the Indian Civil Service was regarded as efficient, benevolent and incorruptible, but revisionist historians have recently questioned its competence and derided its altruism.
In this absorbing, extensively researched new book, David Gilmour traces the lives of its officials, from recruitment to retirement, from jungle to Government House, from a bungalow in Burma to a residency in Rajputana. He describes their work and their leisure, their intellectual and their private lives. The result is a portrait more varied and complicated than that painted by their old admirers, and yet fairer and subtler than those routinely produced by their post-colonial detractors.
£12.99
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Library Journal Review
British historian and biographer Gilmour (fellow, Royal Soc. of Literature), who has written other works dealing with 19th-century India, here examines British imperial activities during the reign of Queen Victoria in the area that now includes India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Burma. Between 1837 and 1901, the small Indian Civil Service (ICS) administered this region of 300 million people. Gilmour explains how a mere 1000 officers were able to accomplish this task. He gives a brief overview of the period, touching on the various political and social issues related to the area, and talks about how members of the ICS were recruited and trained and what their daily family life was like. The majority of this book, which includes 20 pages of notes and an extensive bibliography, reviews the various sections of the service and addresses how the officers achieved their goals. One chapter, for example, is devoted to the administration of law, while another discusses the role of the district officer. Gilmour very successfully elucidates this period in history. Highly recommended for academic and larger public libraries.-Joel W. Tscherne, formerly with Cleveland P.L. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
How much do we really know about the lives of the British in imperial India? Gilmour's deftly organized, encyclopedic account of the day-to-day existence of the members of the Indian Civil Service (ICS) upends the view of the British rulers as tyrannical, racist philistines, an image born out of such works as E.M. Forster's A Passage to India and advanced strenuously since postcolonial studies emerged in the 1970s. Gilmour, author of highly regarded biographies of Rudyard Kipling and Lord Curzon, assembles a wealth of light, amusing anecdotes on an astounding range of topics concerning the members of the ICS, including their college days, bad habits, job duties, gripes about the weather and courtship practices. Though lacking in analysis, the sympathetic general portrait gives a good insider's view of how these men fared in an unfamiliar and sometimes dangerous region. A firm understanding of the British mindset and playful characterizations of its idiosyncrasies provide entertainment and insight, but, lacking a central thread or thesis, the book often feels inessential. The flatness of its prose may make reading wearisome, though the breadth and care of the scholarship merit esteem. Maps, b&w photos. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedCHOICE Review
In 1963, Philip Mason, a former officer of the Indian Civil Service (ICS), the administrative elite of the British Raj, published (under the pseudonym Philip Woodruff) The Men Who Ruled India (1954), the second of his two-volume history of the ICS. Beautifully written and perceptive, it was also inevitably nostalgic and a bit defensive. Nothing has appeared to supplant it as a general account in the ensuing 40 years. Gilmour's book, although he confines himself to the Victorian years, should now take its place as the best introduction, not only to the ICS but to the structure and ethos of the Raj itself. Gilmour (Columbia Univ.), like Mason, admires what the ICS accomplished, but he has the advantage of greater historical perspective, access to a wide range of personal papers, and the numerous scholarly explorations of the Raj published since Mason's time. The result is a nuanced account of how ICS members were recruited and trained, as well as what they did during their Indian careers. Gilmour is far from uncritical but recognizes, as did Mason, that the Raj, that crucial prop of Imperial Britain, was inconceivable without the ICS. ^BSumming Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. R. A. Callahan emeritus, University of DelawareBooklist Review
Biographer of Lord Curzon and Rudyard Kipling, Gilmour deepens his study of British imperialists with this tour of lives and careers in the Indian Civil Service (ICS), the bureaucratic bulwark of British rule of India. Within the chronological brackets of the Indian Mutiny of 1857 and the death of Queen Victoria in 1901, Gilmour tours topics such as recruitment into the ICS, the experience of adjusting to India, and advancement up the ICS ladder. An intriguing theme is the way a civil servant was both an exile from England and a benevolent despot in India. The career of one Alfred Lyall, who arrived in 1855 and retired to England 32 years later, illustrates every topic Gilmour takes up, whether social life, methods of rule (Lyall topped out as a lieutenant governor, one tier beneath viceroy), or attitudes about the propriety of empire. Administrative history aside, social history readers have more to savor here, as Gilmour richly recovers the workaday aspects of an imperial career, from finding a wife to managing servants to seeking distractions in lonely postings. --Gilbert Taylor Copyright 2006 BooklistKirkus Book Review
Wide-ranging study of the handful of British civil servants who ruled the 300 million people of 19th-century South Asia, and who left "their impress as Rome did hers on Western Europe." In the late-19th century, following a couple hundred years of crown rule, the British population of India was a fifth that of Glasgow, made up mostly of soldiers and administrators. They were a motley lot, writes historian Gilmour (Curzon, 2003, etc.). Some were intellectuals who longed to be posted to remote hill stations so that there, away from it all, they could finally find time to read all the books they ever dreamed of reading; some were hunters who wanted the same postings so that they "could disappear into the jungle" and shoot whatever they saw. Intellectual or jock, it helped in those settings to know how to play whist, an essential survival skill, and to be cheery in the face of whatever circumstance, cheeriness being "a quality much prized by Anglo-Indians." Some could be paternalistic, writes Gilmour, content to leave the people--"the most craven, irritating and mendacious beings in the world"--mostly to their own devices as long as they didn't upset the colonial routine of scrambled eggs and afternoon brandy. Yet, Gilmour observes, most of the career servants of empire were surprisingly free of prejudice, believing themselves to belong "not to a superior race but to a more advanced civilization" that it was their duty to extend to the Indians. The smartest of the Anglo-Indians recognized that their days as rulers were numbered and that their kind were "people dancing under the shadow of a volcanic mountain," and even the least of them, Gilmour writes, lost little time in making miniature Indias in their English homes once they finally returned to the mother country. A solid complement to Niall Ferguson's Empire (2003), Charles Allen's Soldier Sahibs (2001) and other recent work on British India. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.