Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-jwnkl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-10T13:35:28.705Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 March 2021

Claude Markovits
Affiliation:
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
India and the World
A History of Connections, c. 1750–2000
, pp. 241 - 263
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Aziz, Abdul. 1945. The Mansabdari System and the Mughal Army. Lahore.Google Scholar
Munshi, Abdullah. 1955. Hikayat Abdullah. Trans. A. H. Hill. Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 28/3: 171.Google Scholar
Acharyya, Snehangshu Kanta and Saha, Mahadev Prasad (eds.) 1957. The Revolt of Hindustan or, The New World by Ernest Jones, with a New Introduction and Other Prose Writings of the Poet on the Revolt of 1857. Calcutta: Eastern Trading Co.Google Scholar
Ahmed, Rafiuddin. 1981. The Bengal Muslims 1871–1906: A Quest for Identity. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Alam, Muzaffar. 2004. The Languages of Political Islam in India c. 1200–1800. New Delhi: Permanent Black.Google Scholar
Ali, Ahmed. 1940. Twilight in Delhi. London: Hogarth Press.Google Scholar
Allen, Calvin H. 1981. ‘The Indian Merchant Community of Masqat’. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 44: 3953.Google Scholar
Amrith, Sunil S. 2013. Crossing the Bay of Bengal: The Furies of Nature and the Fortunes of Migrants. Cambridge, MA/London: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Anand, Mulk Raj. 1940 (2000). Across the Black Waters. New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Anderson, Clare. 2012. Subaltern Lives: Biographies of Colonialism in the Indian Ocean World 1790–1920. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Army Training Command. 1997. The Indian Army: United Nations Peacekeeping Operations. New Delhi: Lancer/London: Spartech & Lancer.Google Scholar
Arnold, David. 1983. ‘White Colonization and Labour in Nineteenth-Century India’. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 11/2: 133–58.Google Scholar
Arnold, David. 2000. Science, Technology and Medicine in Colonial India: The New Cambridge History of India, III-5. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aslanian, Sebouh David. 2011. From the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean: The Global Trade Networks of Armenian Merchants from New Julfa. Berkeley/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Avineri, Shlomo (ed.) 1969. Karl Marx on Colonialism and Modernization. New York: Archer.Google Scholar
Azhar, Ahmad. 2019. Revolution in Reform: Trade-Unionism in Lahore, c. 1920–70. Hyderabad: Orient BlackSwan.Google Scholar
Bagchi, Amiya Kumar. 1972. Private Investment in India 1900–1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Balachandran, Gopalan. 1996. John’s Bullion Empire: Britain’s Gold Problem and India between the Wars. Richmond: Curzon Press.Google Scholar
Balachandran, Gopalan. 2012. Globalizing Labour? Indian Seafarers and World Shipping, c. 1870–1945. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bald, Vivek. 2013. Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America. Cambridge, MA/London: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Banaji, Jairus. 2013. Fascism: Essays on Europe and India. New Delhi: Three Essays Collective.Google Scholar
Bandhopadhyay, P. K. 2011. Sepoys in the British Overseas Expeditions. Calcutta: K.P. Bagchi & Co.Google Scholar
Banerjee, Payal. 2007. ‘Chinese Indians in “Fire”: Refraction of Ethnicity, Gender, Sexuality and Citizenship in Post-Colonial India’s Memory of the Sino-Indian War’. China Report, 43/4: 437–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banks, Marcus. 1992. Organizing Jainism in India and England. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bates, Crispin and Carter, Marina. (eds.) 2013. Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857. Vol. 3: Global Perspectives. Los Angeles/New Delhi: Sage.Google Scholar
Baugh, D. 2011. The Global Seven Years War 1754–1763: Britain and France in a Great Power Contest. Harlow: Longman.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 1989. Imperial Meridian: The British Empire and the World, 1780–1830. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 2004a. The Birth of the Modern World 1780–1914: Global Connections and Comparisons. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 2004b. ‘Eric Thomas Stokes 1924–1981’ in Hasan, Mushirul and Gupta, Narayani (eds.), India’s Colonial Encounter: Essays in Memory of Eric Stokes. New Delhi: Manohar: 338.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 2007. ‘The Boxer Uprising and India: Globalizing Myths’ in Bickers, Robert and Tiedemann, R. G. (eds.), The Boxers, China and the World. Lanham, MD/Plymouth: Rowman & Littlefield: 147–55.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 2012. Recovering Liberties: Indian Thought in the Age of Liberalism and Empire. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan and Harper, Tim. 2004. Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia 1941–1945. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Bayly, Susan. 2004. ‘Imagining “Greater India”: French and Indian Visions of Colonialism in the Indic Mode’. Modern Asian Studies, 38/3: 703–44.Google Scholar
Bean, Susan. 2001. Yankee India: American Commercial and Cultural Encounters with India in the Age of Sail 1784–1860. Salem, MA: Peabody Essex Museum/Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing.Google Scholar
Beaton, Patrick. 1971 (1859). Creoles and Coolies, or Five Years in Mauritius. Port Washington/New York/London: Kennikat Press.Google Scholar
Beaurline, L. A. and Bowers, Fredson (eds.) 1967. John Dryden, Four Tragedies. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Beckerlegge, Gwylynn. 2000. The Ramakrishna Mission: The Making of a Modern Hindu Movement. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Beckert, Sven. 2014. Empire of Cotton: A New History of Global Capitalism. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Belich, James. 1986. The New Zealand Wars and the Victorian Interpretation of Racial Conflict. Auckland: Auckland University Press.Google Scholar
Belle, Carl Valdivella. 2015. Tragic Orphans: Indians in Malaysia. Singapore: Institute of South-East Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Bender, Jill C. 2016. The 1857 Indian Uprising and the British Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Benyamin, , 2012. Goat Days. Trans. from Malayalam. New Delhi: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Bernier, François. 1969. Travels in the Mogul Empire A.D. 1656–1668. Delhi: S. Chand & Co.Google Scholar
Berry, Mary Elizabeth. 1982. Hideyoshi. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Bess, M. 1993. ‘Peace through Social Transformation: Danilo Dolci’s Long Range Experiments with Gandhian Nonviolence’ in Bess, M. (ed.), Realism, Utopia and the Mushroom Cloud: Four Activist Intellectuals and Their Strategies for Peace 1945–1989. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press: 155217.Google Scholar
Betta, Chiara. 2005. ‘The Trade Diaspora of Baghdadi Jews: From India to China’s Treaty Ports’ in McCabe, Ina Baghdiantz, Harlaftis, Gelina and Minoglou, Ioanna Peplasis (eds.), Diaspora Entrepreneurial Networks: Four Centuries of History. Oxford/New York: Berg: 269–86.Google Scholar
Bettelheim, Charles. 1968. India Independent. London: MacGibbon and Kee.Google Scholar
Bhatawadekar, Sai. 2014. ‘Claims and Disclaimers: Schopenhauer and the Cross-Cultural Comparative Enterprise’ in Cho, Joanne Miyang, Kurlander, Eric and McGetchin, Douglas T. (eds.), Transnational Encounters between Germany and India: Kindred Spirits in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Oxford/New York: Routledge: 3751.Google Scholar
Bhattacharjee, Anuradha. 2012. The Second Homeland: Polish Refugees in India; with the Chronicle of Franek Herzog. Los Angeles: Sage.Google Scholar
Bhattacharya, Anil (ed.). 2009. Acharya Profulla Chandra Ray: A Collection of Writings. Calcutta: Calcutta University.Google Scholar
Bhatti, Anil and Voigt, Johannes H. (eds.). 1999. Jewish Exile in India 1933–1945. New Delhi: Manohar.Google Scholar
Bhatti, Anil. 2011. ‘Retcliffe’s Nana Sahib and the German Discourse on India’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 137–51.Google Scholar
Biddulph, J. J. 1901. Stringer Lawrence, Father of the Indian Army. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
Birla, G. D. 1953. In the Shadow of the Mahatma: A Personal Memoir. Bombay: Orient Longmans.Google Scholar
Birla, Ritu. 2009. Stages of Capital: Law, Culture, and Market Governance in Late Colonial India. Durham/London: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Bishara, Fahad Ahmad. 2017. A Sea of Debt: Law and Economic Life in the Western Indian Ocean, 1780–1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bonnerjee, Joyani. 2015. ‘Beyond Boundaries’: Hindu Spaces in the Chinatowns of Kolkata and Singapore’ in Bhattacharya, Jayati (ed.), Indian and Chinese Immigrant Communities: Comparative Perspectives. Singapore: Institute of South-East Asian Studies/London: Anthem Press Anthem Press: 153–164.Google Scholar
Bose, Sugata and Manjapra, Kris (eds.). 2010. Cosmopolitan Thought Zones: South Asia and the Global Circulation of Ideas. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Braudel, Fernand. 1972/3. The Mediterranean in the Time of Philip II. London: Collins.Google Scholar
Branson, Clive. 1945. British Soldier in India: The Letters of Clive Branson. London: The Communist Party of Great Britain.Google Scholar
Brodie, Nick. 2018. ‘Once Upon a Muslim Tasmania’. 40 Degrees South, 91: 4851.Google Scholar
Martin, Buber. 1966. ‘Letter to Mahatma Gandhi’, February 1939, in Meyer, P. (ed.), The Pacifist Conscience. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books: 269–82.Google Scholar
Burnes, Alexander. 1834 (reprint 1973). Travels into Bokhara: Together with a Narrative of a Voyage on the Indus. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
Campbell, Bruce F. 1980. Ancient Wisdom Revived: A History of the Theosophical Movement. Berkeley/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Campbell, Gwynn (ed.). 2004. The Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. London/Portland, OR: Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Carey, Peter. 1977. ‘The Sepoy Conspiracy of 1815 in Java’. Bijdragen tot de Taal, Land-en Volkenkunde, 133: 294322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carson, Clayborne (ed.). 1998. The Autobiography of Martin Luther King. New York: Warner Books.Google Scholar
Carter, Marina. 1995. Servants, Sirdars and Settlers: Indians in Mauritius 1834–1874. Delhi/Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 1989. Rethinking Working-Class History: Bengal 1890–1940. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 2000. Provincializing Europe: Post-Colonial Thought and Historical Difference. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 2002. ‘A Small History of Subaltern Studies’ in Habitations of Modernity: Essays in the Wake of Subaltern Studies. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press: 319.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 2018. ‘Anthropocene Time’. History and Theory, 57/1: 532.Google Scholar
Chakravarti, Nalini Ranjan. 1971. The Indian Minority of Burma: Rise and Decline of an Immigrant Community. London/New York/Bombay: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Chandavarkar, Raj. 1993. The Origins of Industrial Capitalism in India: Business Strategies and the Working Classes in Bombay 1900–1940. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chandler, D. G. 1967. ‘The Expedition to Abyssinia 1867–68’ in Bond, Brian (ed.), Victorian Military Campaigns. London: Hutchinson & Co: 107–59.Google Scholar
Chatterjee, Partha. 1986. Nationalist Thought and the Colonial World: A Derivative Discourse? London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Chattopadhyay, Suchetana. 2011. An Early Communist: Muzaffar Ahmad in Calcutta, 1913–1929. New Delhi: Tulika Books.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, K. N. 1985. Trade and Civilization in the Indian Ocean: An Economic History from the Rise of Islam to 1750. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, Sashi Bhusan. 1957. Civil Rebellion in the Indian Mutinies 1857–1859. Calcutta: World Press.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, Sukanta (ed.). 1998. A Certain Sense. Poems by Jibanananda Das. Calcutta: Sahitya Akademi.Google Scholar
Chen, Dasheng and Lombard, Denys. 2000. ‘Foreign Merchants in Maritime Trade in “Qanzhou” (“Zeitun”), Thirteen and Fourteenth Centuries’ in Lombard, Denys and Aubin, Jean (eds.), Asian Merchants and Businessmen in the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 1923.Google Scholar
Cherubini, Chiara. 2011. ‘Freedom and Democracy: The Revolt in the Italian Press’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 6380.Google Scholar
Chester, Lucy. 2019. ‘“Close Parallels”? Interrelated Discussion of Partition in South Asia and the Palestine Mandate (1936–1948)’ in Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura (eds.), Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press: 128–53.Google Scholar
Choudhury, Rishad. 2016. ‘The Hajj and the Hindi: The Ascent of the Indian Sufi Lodge in the Ottoman Empire’. Modern Asian Studies, 50/6: 18881931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chowdhury, Prem. 2000. Colonial India and the Making of Empire Cinema: Image, Ideology and Identity. Manchester/New York: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Chowdhury, Prita and Chaliha, Joyoti. 1990. ‘The Jews of Calcutta’ in Chaudhuri, Sukanta (ed.), Calcutta, The Living City. Volume I: The Past. Calcutta: Oxford University Press: 52–3.Google Scholar
Clark, T. W. (ed.). 1970. The Novel in India: Its Birth and Development. London: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Codell, Julie F. 2003. ‘Ironies of Mimicry: The Art Collection of Sayaji Rao III Gaekwad, Maharaja of Baroda, and the Cultural Policies of Early Modern India’. Journal of the History of Collections, 15/1: 127–46.Google Scholar
Cole, Juan Ricardo I. 1988. Roots of North Indian Shi’ism in Iran and Iraq. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Cole, Juan Ricardo I. 1989. ‘Of Crowds and Empires: Afro-Asian Riots and European Expansion 1857–1882’. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 31/1: 106–33.Google Scholar
Collingham, Elizabeth M., 2001. Imperial Bodies: The Physical Experience of the Raj, c. 1800–1947. Cambridge: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Cortesao, Armando (ed.). 1944. The Suma Oriental of Tomé Pires. London: Hakluyt Society.Google Scholar
Dale, Stephen. 1994. Indian Merchants and Eurasian Trade 1600–1750. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalmia, Yasodhara (ed.). 2014. Amrita Sher-Gil, Art and Life: A Reader. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Damosch, David. 2003. What Is World Literature? Princeton/Woodstock: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Darling, Malcolm. 1934. Wisdom and Work in the Punjab Village. London: Humphrey Milford/Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Das Gupta, Ashin. 1967. Malabar in Asian Trade 1740–1800. London/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, Swati. 2011. ‘Lost in Translation: Jules Verne and the Indian Rebellion’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 221–37.Google Scholar
Davis, Mike. 2000. Late Victorian Holocausts: El Nino Famines and the Origins of the Third World. London/New York: Verso.Google Scholar
Dawood, Yusuf K. 2000. Return to Paradise. Nairobi/Kampala/Dar-es-Salaam: East African Educational Publishers.Google Scholar
De Cecco, Marcello. 1974. Money and Empire: The International Gold Standard 1890–1914. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
De Lepervanche, Mary M. 1984. Indians in a White Australia: An Account of Race, Class and Indian Migration to Eastern Australia. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
De Meuron, Guy. 1982. Le Régiment Meuron, 1781–1816. Lausanne: Le Forum Historique.Google Scholar
Desai, Anita. 1988. Baumgartner’s Bombay. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Desai, Rashmikant Harilal. 1963. Indian Immigrants in Britain. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Devarajoo, Karthiyaini. 2009. ‘Transforming Diaspora’ in Kadekar, Laxmi Narayan, Sahoo, Ajaya Kumar and Bhattacharya, Gauri (eds.), The Indian Diaspora: Historical and Contemporary Context. New Delhi: Rawat Publications: 135–47.Google Scholar
Devika, J. 2018. ‘Decolonizing Nationalist Racism? Reflections on Travel Writing from Mid-Twentieth Century Kerala, India’. Modern Asian Studies, 52/4: 1316–46.Google Scholar
Devji, Faisal. 2019. ‘From Minority to Nation’ in Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura (eds.), Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press: 3155.Google Scholar
Dew, Edward. 1978. The Difficult Flowering of Surinam: Ethnicity and Politics in a Plural Society. The Hague: Nijhoff.Google Scholar
Diderot, Denis and d’Alembert, Jean Le Rond. 1751. Encyclopédie ou dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers, vol. XIV. Paris.Google Scholar
Disney, Anthony R. 2009. A History of Portugal and the Portuguese Empire from Beginnings to 1807. Volume 2: The Portuguese Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Doshi, Saryu (ed.). 1995. The Royal Bequest: Art Treasures of the Baroda Museum and Picture Gallery. Bombay: India Book House.Google Scholar
Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura. 2019. Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Dutt, Romesh Chunder. 1902. The Economic History of India. London: K. Paul, Trübner, Trench & Co.Google Scholar
Dutt, Toru. 1878. Le Journal de Mlle d’Arvers, nouvelle écrite en français par Toru Dutt, jeune et célèbre hindoue de Calcutta morte en 1877. Paris: Librairie Académique Didier & Cie.Google Scholar
Ebeling, Sascha and Trento, Margherita. 2018. ‘From Jesuit Missionary to Tamil Pulavar: Costanzo Gioseffo Beschi SJ (1680–1747), the “Great Heroic Sage”’ in Leucci, Tiziana, Markovits, Claude and Fourcade, Marie (eds.), L’Inde et l’Italie: Rencontres intellectuelles, politiques et artistiques. Paris: Editions de l’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Collection Purusartha 35: 5389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Egreteau, Renaud. 2011. ‘Burmese Indians in Contemporary Burma: Heritage, Influence and Perceptions since 1988’. Race and Ethnicity, 12/1: 3354.Google Scholar
Eleftheriotis, Dimitris. 2006. ‘“A Cultural Colony of India”: Indian Films in Greece in the 1950s and 1960s’. South Asian Popular Culture, 4/2: 101–12.Google Scholar
EllinwoodJr., DeWitt C. (ed.). 2005. Between Two Worlds: A Rajput Officer in the Indian Army 1905–1921, Based on the Diary of Amar Singh of Jaipur. Lanham, MD/Oxford: Hamilton Books.Google Scholar
Emerson, Ralph Waldo. 2015. The Major Poetry, ed. with intro. and commentary by Albert J. von Frank. Cambridge, MA/London: Bellknap Press.Google Scholar
Evenson, Norma. 1966. Chandigarh. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Fairbank, John K. 1964. Trade and Diplomacy on the China Coast: The Opening of the Treaty Ports 1842–1854. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Farnie, Douglas Anthony. 1979. The English Cotton Industry and the World Market 1815–1896. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Farooqi, Amar. 1998. Smuggling as Subversion: Colonialism, Indian Merchants and the Politics of Opium. New Delhi: New Age International.Google Scholar
Fichter, James R. 2010. ‘So Great a Proffit’: How the East Indian Trade Transformed Anglo-American Capitalism. Cambridge, MA/London: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Figueira, Dorothy Mathilda. 1991. Translating the Orient: The Reception of Sakuntala in 19th century Europe. Albany: SUNY Press.Google Scholar
Fischer-Tiné, Harald. 2009. Low and Licentious Europeans: Race, Class and ‘White Subalternity’ in Colonial India. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan.Google Scholar
Fisher, Michael H. 1996. The First Indian Author in English: Dean Mahomed (1759–1851) in India, Ireland and England. Delhi/Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Fiske, Adele and Emmerich, Christoph. 2004. ‘The Use of Buddhist Scriptures in Dr B.R. Ambedkar’s The Buddha and His Dhamma’ in Jhondale, Surendra and Beltz, Johannes (eds.), Reconstructing the World: B.R. Ambedkar and Buddhism in India. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 97119.Google Scholar
Foltz, Richard. 1996. ‘The Mughal Occupation of Balkh: 1646–1647’. Journal of Islamic Studies, 7/1:4961.Google Scholar
Forster, Edward Morgan. 1924. A Passage to India. London: Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Ulrike, Freitag and Clarence-Smith, William Gervase (eds.). 1997. Hadhrami Traders, Scholars and Statesmen in the Indian Ocean, 1750s–1950s. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Frey, Karsten. 2006. India’s Nuclear Bomb and National Security. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Fries, Yvonne and Bibin, Thomas. 1984. The Undesirables: The Expatriation of the Tamil People ‘of Recent Indian Origin’ from the Plantations in Sri Lanka to India. Calcutta: Bagchi.Google Scholar
Frith, Nicola. 2011. ‘French Counter-Narratives: Nationalisme, Patriotisme et Révolution’, in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 4362.Google Scholar
Frykenberg, Robert Eric (ed.). 2003. Christians and Missionaries in India: Cross-Cultural Communication since 1500 with Special Reference to Caste, Conversion and Colonialism. London: Routledge/Curzon.Google Scholar
Gadgil, Mahendra and Guha, Ramchandra. 1992. This Fissured Land: The Ecological History of India. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Galloway, J. H. 1989. The Sugar Cane Industry: An Historical Geography from Its Origins to 1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand. 1928. Satyagraha in South Africa. Ahmedabad: Navajivan.Google Scholar
Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand. 1959. The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, vol. III, 28 February 1898–1 October 1903. New Delhi: Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India.Google Scholar
Gardner, Nikolas. 2014. The Siege of Kutt-al-Amara: At War in Mesopotamia, 1915–1916. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Giraldez, Antonio. 2015. The Cargo of Trade: The Manila Galleons and the Dawn of the Global Economy. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Gittinger, Mattiebelle. 1982. Master Dyers to the World: Technique and Trade in Early Indian Dyed Cottons. Washington, DC: Textile Museum.Google Scholar
Glasson Deschaumes, Ghislaine and Ivekovic, Rada. 2003. Divided Countries, Separated Cities: The Modern Legacy of Partition. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Golani, Motti. 2019. ‘“The Meat and the Bones”: Recovering the Origins of the Partition of Mandate Palestine’ in Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura (eds.), Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press: 85108.Google Scholar
Gommans, Jos J. L. 1995. The Rise of the Indo-Afghan Empire, c.1710–1780. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Goodman, Grant Kohn. 2013. Japan and the Dutch 1600–1853. s.l. Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gopalan, A. K. s.d. In the Cause of the People: Reminiscences. Bombay/Calcutta/Madras/New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Govender, Ronnie. 1996. ‘1949’ in At the Edge and Other Cato Manor Stories. Pretoria: Manx: 107–17.Google Scholar
Graves, Robert. 1960 (1929). Goodbye to All That. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Greenberg, Michael. 1951. British Trade and the Opening of China, 1800–42. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Greenhut, Jeremy. 1983. ‘The Imperial Reserve: The Indian Corps on the Western Front, 1914–15’. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 12/1: 5473.Google Scholar
Greenough, Paul. 1982. Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal: The Bengal Famine 1943–44. New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Grierson, George A. 2011. ‘Diary of a Tour in the Bengal Presidency, 1883’ in Sarup, Leela Gujadhur (ed.), Facts about Indian Indentured Labour: Reports and Diaries of Major G.D. Pitcher and George A. Grierson. Calcutta: Aldrich International: 242332.Google Scholar
Griffiths, Percival Joseph. 1967. The History of the Indian Tea Industry. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.Google Scholar
Groseclose, Barbara S. 1995. British Sculpture and the Company Raj: Church Monuments and Public Statuary in Madras, Calcutta and Bombay to 1858. Newark: University of Delaware Press.Google Scholar
Guha, Ramachandra. 2013. Gandhi before India. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Guha, Ranajit. 1982. ‘On Some Aspects of the Historiography of Colonial India’ in Guha, Ranajit (ed.), Subaltern Studies I. Writings on South Asian History and Society. Delhi: Oxford University Press: 18.Google Scholar
Guha, Ranajit. 1987. Elementary Aspects of Peasant Insurgency in Colonial India. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gupta, Suman. 2015. ‘On the Indian Readers of Hitler’s Mein Kampf’ in Consumable Texts in Contemporary India: Uncultured Books and Bibliographical Sociology. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan: 6179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Habib, Irfan. 1995. ‘Colonialization of the Indian Economy’ in Essays in Indian History: Towards a Marxist Perception. New Delhi: Tulika: 296335.Google Scholar
Hardwick, Louise. 2014. ‘Creolizing the Caribbean “Coolie”: A Biopolitical Reading of Indian Indenture Labourers and the Ethnoclass Hierarchy’. International Journal of Francophone Studies. 17/3–4: 397419.Google Scholar
Hartog, Rudolf. 2001. The Sign of the Tiger: Subhas Chandra Bose and His Indian Legion in Germany 1941–1945. New Delhi: Rupa & Co.Google Scholar
Hasan, Khalid (ed.). 2006. O City of Lights. Faiz Ahmed Faiz: Selected Poetry and Biographical Notes. Karachi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hasan, Mushirul (ed.). 2005. Westward Bound: Travels of Mirza Abu Taleb (trans. Charles Stewart). New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hatcher, Brian K. 1999. Eclecticism in Modern Hindu Discourse. New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hatcher, Brian K. (ed.). 2015. Hinduism in the Modern World. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hayes, Romain. 2011. Subhas Chandra Bose in Nazi Germany: Politics, Intelligence and Propaganda 1941–43. London: Hurst & Company.Google Scholar
Haynes, Douglas E. 2010. ‘Creating the Consumer? Advertising, Capitalism and the Middle Class in Urban Western India’ in Haynes, Douglas E., McGowan, Abigail, Roy, Tirthankar and Yanagisawa, Haruka (eds.), Towards a History of Consumption in South Asia. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 185223.Google Scholar
Hentley, J. S. 2004. ‘Chasing the Dragon: Accounting for the Under-Performance of India by Comparison with China in Attracting Foreign Direct Investment’. Journal of International Development, 16/7: 1039–52.Google Scholar
Hofmeyr, Isabel. 2011. ‘Gandhi’s Printing Press: Indian Ocean Print Culture and Cosmopolitanism’ in Hofmeyr, Isabel and Williams, Michelle (eds.), South Africa and India: Shaping the Global South. Johannesburg: Wits University Press: 2238.Google Scholar
Hossain, Hamida. 1988. The Company Weavers of Bengal: The East India Company and the Organization of Textile Production in Bengal 1750–1813. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Howard, Michael. 1991. Fiji: Race and Politics in an Island State. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.Google Scholar
Huntingford, G. W. B. (ed. and trans.). 2017. The Periplus of the Erythrean Sea, by an Unknown Author, with Some Extracts from Agatharkides, ‘On the Erythrean Sea’. London: Hakluyt Society.Google Scholar
Ikeya, Chio. 2017. ‘Transcultural Intimacies in Burma and the Straits Settlements. A History of Belonging, Difference and Empire’ in Laffan, Michael (ed.), Belonging across the Bay of Bengal: Religious Rites, Colonial Migrations, National Rights. London: Bloomsbury Academic: 113–38.Google Scholar
Ingram, Edward (ed.), 1970. Two Views of British India: The Private Correspondence of Mr Dundas and Lord Wellesley 1798–1801. Bath: Adam and Dart.Google Scholar
I’tesamuddin, Mirza Sheikh. 2002. The Wonders of Vilayet: Being the Memoir, Originally in Persian, of a Visit to Britain and France (trans. Kaiser Haq). Leeds: Peepul Tree.Google Scholar
Jackson, Isabella. 2012. ‘The Raj on Nanjing Road: Sikh Policemen in Treaty-Port Shanghai’. Modern Asian Studies, 46/6: 16721704.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, Roy. 2010. Maulana Mawdudi and Political Islam: Authority and the Islamic State. s.l. Routledge.Google Scholar
Jackson, Stanley. 1989. The Sassoons: Portrait of a Dynasty. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Jaffrelot, Christophe. 1996. The Hindu Nationalist Movement. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Jagan, Cheddi. 1966. The West on Trial: My Fight for Guyana’s Freedom. London: Michael Joseph.Google Scholar
Jaher, Frederic C. and Kling, Blair B. 2008. ‘Hollywood’s India: The Memory of RKO’s Gunga Din’. Film & History, 38/2: 3344.Google Scholar
Jain, Kajri. 2007. Gods in the Bazaar: The Economies of Indian Calendar Art. Durham, NC/London: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Jalais, Annu. 2014. Forest of Tigers: People, Politics and Environment in the Sunderbans. s.l. Routledge India.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jasanoff, Maya. 2006. Edge of Empire: Lives, Culture and Conquest in the East 1750–1850. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Jensen, Joan M. 1988. Passage from India: Asian Indian Immigrants in the United States. New Haven, CT/London: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Jhondale, Surendra and Beltz, Johannes (eds.). 2004. Reconstructing the World: B.R. Ambedkar and Buddhism in India. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Jindal, Anu. 2011. ‘Contemporary Art Currents between Japan and India’ in Takao, Uno (ed.), Changing Perceptions of Japan in South Asia in the New Asian Era: The State of Japanese Studies in India and Other SAARC Countries. Kyoto: International Research Centre for Japanese Studies: 205–19.Google Scholar
John, Stanley. 2013. ‘Malayali Diaspora in the Gulf: Temporary Economic Migration’ in George, Susan and Thomas, T. V. (eds.), Malayali Diaspora: From Kerala to the Ends of the World. New Delhi: Serials Publications: 4559.Google Scholar
Johnston, Hugh. 1984. East Indians in Canada. Ottawa: Canadian Historical Society.Google Scholar
Jonker, Gerdlen. 2016. The Ahmadiyya Quest for Religious Progress: Missionizing Europe 1900–1965. Leiden/Boston: Brill.Google Scholar
Joshi, Kiran. 1999. Documenting Chandigarh. Ahmedabad: Mapin Books.Google Scholar
Joshi, Vijay and Little, I. M. D. 1997. India’s Economic Reforms 1991–2001. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kämpchen, Martin and Bargha, Imre (eds.). 2014. Rabindranath Tagore: One Hundred Years of Global Reception. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan.Google Scholar
Kanapathipillai, Vilai. 2009. Citizenship and Statelessness in Sri Lanka: The Case of the Tamil Estate Workers. London: Anthem Press.Google Scholar
Kanigel, Robert. 1991. The Man Who Knew Infinity: A Life of the Genius Ramanujan. New York: Scribner; Toronto: Collier Macmillan Canada; New York: Maxwell Macmillan International.Google Scholar
Karatchkova, Elena. 2013. ‘The Russian Factor in the Indian Mutiny’ in Bates, Crispin and Carter, Marina (eds.), Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857. Vol. 3: Global Perspectives: Los Angeles/New Delhi: Sage: 120–33.Google Scholar
Karyekar, Madhuvanti. 2014. ‘Fostering Aesthetic Tolerance through Literary Translation: Georg Forster’s Sakuntala’ in Cho, Joanne Miyang, Kurlander, Eric and McGetchin, Douglas T. (eds.), Transnational Encounters between Germany and India: Kindred Spirits in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Oxford/New York: Routledge: 1324.Google Scholar
Katoch, Hemant Singh and Dennis, Peter. 2018. Imphal 1944: The Japanese Invasion of India. London: Osprey Publishing.Google Scholar
Kaul, Chandrika. 2013. ‘“You Cannot Govern by Force Alone”: W.H. Russell, The Times and the Great Rebellion’ in Bates, Crispin and Carter, Marina (eds.), Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857. Vol. 3: Global Perspectives: Los Angeles/New Delhi: Sage: 1835.Google Scholar
Kaunda, Kenneth D. 1962. Zambia Shall Be Free: An Autobiography. London: Heinemann Educational Books.Google Scholar
Keddie, Nikki R. (ed. and trans.). 1968. An Islamic Response to Imperialism: Political and Religious Writings of Jamal-al-Din-al-Afghani Including a Translation of the Refutation of the Materialists from the Original Persian. Berkeley/Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Kejariwal, O. P. 1988. The Asiatic Society of Bengal and the Discovery of India’s Past 1784–1838. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kelly, John Dunham and Singh, Uttra Kumari (ed. and trans.). 2003. My Twenty-One Years in the Fiji Islands; and the Story of the Haunted Line, by Totaram Sanadhaya. Suva: Fiji Museum.Google Scholar
Khan, Noor-Aiman I. 2011. Egyptian-Indian Nationalist Collaboration and the British Empire. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Khan, Yasmin. 2015. The Raj at War: A People’s History of India’s Second World War. London: The Bodley Head.Google Scholar
Khanna, T. and Yafeh, Y. 2007. ‘Business Groups in Emerging Markets: Paragons or Parasites’. Journal of Economic Literature, 45/2: 331–72.Google Scholar
Khin, Yi. 1988. The Dobama Movement in Burma (1930–1938). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Khoo, Boo Teik. 1993 (reprint 2006). ‘Malay Attitudes towards Indians’ in Mani, A. K. and Sandhu, K. S. (eds.), Indian Communities in Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies: 266–87.Google Scholar
Khullar, Sonal. 2015. Worldly Affiliations: Artistic Practice, National Identity, and Modernism in India, 1930–1990. Oakland: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Kilchenmann, Johann Eduard. 1911. Schweizer-söldner im Dienste der english-Ostindische Kompanie um die Mitte des 18 Jahrhunderts. Ein Betrag zur Geschichte der englischen Untersuchungen in Vorderindien. Grüninger: Buchdrückerei J. Wirz.Google Scholar
Kimani, Peter. 2017. The Dance of the Jakaranda. New York: Akashic Books.Google Scholar
Kirk-Greene, A. H. M. 1971. Crisis and Conflict in Nigeria: A Documentary Sourcebook 1966–1969, Vol. I. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kluwick, Ursula. 2011. Exploring Magic Realism in Salman Rushdie’s Fiction. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kolff, Dirk H. A. 1990. Naukar, Rajput and Sepoy: The Ethnohistory of the Military Labour Market in Hindustan, 1450–1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kopf, David. 1979. The Brahmo Samaj and the Shaping of the Modern Indian Mind. Princeton/Guilford: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Kosambi, Meera (ed. and trans.). 2003. Pandita Ramabai’s American Encounter: The Peoples of the United States. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press.Google Scholar
Kotaiah, B. 1999. A Handbook of Western Arts in the Salar Jung Museum. Hyderabad: Salar Jung Museum Board.Google Scholar
Kulke, Hermann. 2009. ‘The Naval Expeditions of the Cholas in the Context of Asian History’ in Kulke, Hermann, Kesavapany, K. and Sakhuja, Vijay (eds.), Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies: 119.Google Scholar
Lafont, Jean-Marie. 2001. Maharaja Ranjit Singh: The French Connections. Amritsar: Guru Nanak Dev University.Google Scholar
Lago, Mary L. (ed.). 1972. Imperfect Encounter: Letters of William Rothenstein and Rabindranath Tagore 1911–1914. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala (ed.). 2014. The Coal Nation: History, Ecology and Politics of Coal in India. Farnham: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Lal, Brij V. 2001. Mr Tulsi’s Store: A Fijian Journey. Canberra: Pandanus Books.Google Scholar
Lal, Brij V. 2013. ‘Indian Indenture: Experiment and Experience’ in Chatterjee, Joya and Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora. Abingdon/New York: Routledge: 7995.Google Scholar
Lal, Mohan. 1846. Travels in the Panjab, Afghanistan and Turkestan to Balkh, Bokhara and Herat. London: W.H. Allen & Co.Google Scholar
Lanza del Vasto, Joseph Jean. 1943. Pèlerinage aux sources. Paris: Denoël.Google Scholar
Larkin, Brian. 2005. ‘Bendiri Music, Globalisation and Urban Experience in Nigeria’ in Kaur, Ravinder and Sinha, Ajay J. (eds.), Bollyworld: Popular Indian Cinema through a Transnational Lens. New Delhi/Thousand Oaks, CA/London: Sage: 284308.Google Scholar
Lebra-Chapman, Joyce. 2008. The Indian National Army and Japan. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Lemire, Beverley. 1991. Fashion’s Favourite: The Cotton Trade and the Consumer in Britain, 1660–1800. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Leonard, Karen Isaksen. 1992. Making Ethnic Choices: California’s Punjabi Mexican Americans. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Lesser, Jeffrey. 2013. Immigration, Ethnicity and National Identity in Brazil, 1808 to the Present. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Levi, Scott. 2002a. ‘Hindus beyond the Hindu Kush: Indians in the Central Asian Slave Trade’. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 3rd ser., 12/3: 277–88.Google Scholar
Levi, Scott. 2002b. The Indian Diaspora in Central Asia and Its Trade, 1550–1900. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Lewis, Geoffrey. 1975. ‘The Ottoman Proclamation of Jihad in 1914’. Islamic Quarterly, 19: 157–63.Google Scholar
Liebig, Michael and Mishra, Saurabh. 2017. The Arthashastra in a Transcultural Perspective: Comparing Kautilya with Sun-Zi, Nizam-ul-Mulk, Barani and Machiavelli. New Delhi: Pentagon Press.Google Scholar
Lieng, Jennifer. 2007. ‘Migration Patterns and Occupational Specialisation of Kolkata Chinese: An Insider’s History’. China Report, 43/4: 397410.Google Scholar
Lloyd, David. 1996. ‘Discussion outside History: Irish New Histories and “The Subalternity Effect”’ in Amin, Shahid and Chakrabarty, Dipesh (eds.), Subaltern Studies IX: Writings on South Asian History and Society. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 261–77.Google Scholar
Long, Roger D. and Talbot, Ian. 2018. India and World War I: A Centennial Assessment. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Machado, Everton V. 2011. ‘The Rebellion in a 19th Century Indo-Portuguese Novel’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 251–68.Google Scholar
Machado, Pedro. 2004. ‘A Forgotten Corner of the Indian Ocean: Gujarati Merchants, Portuguese India and the Mozambique Slave Trade c. 1730–1830’ in Campbell, Gwynn (ed.), The Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. London: Frank Cass: 1732.Google Scholar
Machado, Pedro. 2014. Ocean of Trade: South Asian Merchants, Africa and the Indian Ocean, c. 1750–1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
MacMunn, George F. 1911. The Martial Races of India. London: Sampson, Low, Marston & Co.Google Scholar
Mahabir, Noor Kumar. 1985. The Still Cry: Personal Accounts of East Indians in Trinidad and Tobago during Indentureship (1845–1917). Tacarigua, Trinidad/Ithaca, NY: Calaloux Publications.Google Scholar
Mahabir, Noorkumar and Maharaj, Ashin. 1989. ‘Hindu Elements in the Shango/Orisha Cult of Trinidad’ in Birbalsingh, Frank (ed.), Indenture and Exile: The Indo-Caribbean Experience. Toronto: TSAR: 191201.Google Scholar
Majeed, Javed. 2012. ‘Literary Modernity in South Asia’ in Peers, Douglas M. and Gooptu, Nandini (eds.), India and the British Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 262–83.Google Scholar
Mallick, Ross. 1994. Indian Communism: Opposition, Collaboration and Institutionalization. Oxford/Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Manjapra, Kris. 2010. M.N.Roy: Marxism and Colonial Cosmopolitanism. Delhi: Routledge India.Google Scholar
Manoa, Pio. 1979. ‘Across the Fence’ in Subramani, (ed.), The Indo-Fijian Experience. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press: 184207.Google Scholar
Mansergh, Nicholas. 1978. The Prelude to Partition: Concepts and Aims in Ireland and India. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Markovits, Claude. 2000. The Global Worlds of Indian Merchants c.1750–1950: Traders of Sind from Bukhara to Panama. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Markovits, Claude. 2010. ‘Indian Soldiers’ Experiences in France during World War I: Seeing Europe from the Rear of the Front’ in Liebau, Heike et al. (eds.), The World in World Wars: Experiences, Perceptions and Perspectives from Africa and Asia. Leiden/Boston: Brill: 2753.Google Scholar
Markovits, Claude. 2017. ‘Turning Mazzini on His Head: Gandhi’s Polemics against Savarkar in Hind Swaraj in Leucci, Tiziana, Markovits, Claude and Fourcade, Marie (eds.), L’Inde et l’Italie: Rencontres intellectuelles, politiques et artistiques. Paris: Editions de l’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, collection Purusartha: 187–98.Google Scholar
Markovits, Rahul. (forthcoming). ‘Ahmad Khan’, Encyclopaedia of Islam 3.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus. 2013. ‘Out of India: Deobandi Islam, Radicalism and the Globalisation of “South Asian Islam”’ in Chatterjee, Joya and Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora. London/New York: Routledge: 211–22.Google Scholar
Marshall, Peter John. 1990. ‘The Whites of British India 1780–1830: A Failed Colonial Society’. The International History Review, XII/1: 2644.Google Scholar
Marston, Daniel. 2014. The Indian Army and the End of the Raj. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich. 1959. The First Indian War of Independence 1857–1859. Moscow: Progress Publishers.Google Scholar
Masuzawa, Tomoko. 2005. The Invention of World Religion, or How European Universalism Was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.). 2011. Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge.Google Scholar
Mbeki, Linda and van Rossum, Matthias. 2017. ‘Private Slave Trade in the Dutch Indian Ocean World: A Study into the Networks and Backgrounds of the Slavers and the Enslaved in South Asia and South Africa’. Slavery and Abolition, 38/1: 95116.Google Scholar
McCabe, Jane. 2017. Race, Tea and Colonial Resettlement: Imperial Families, Interrupted. London/New York: Bloomsbury Academic.Google Scholar
McGarr, Paul M. 2015. ‘The Viceroys Are Disappearing from the Roundabouts in Delhi: British Symbols of Power in Post-Colonial India’. Modern Asian Studies, 49/3: 787831.Google Scholar
McGregor, R. S. 1974. Hindi Literature of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Wiesbaden: Otto Harassowitz.Google Scholar
McMillan, Richard. 2005. The British Occupation of Indonesia 1945–1946: Britain, the Netherlands and the Indonesian Revolution. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
McPherson, Kenneth. 1990. ‘Chulias and Klings: Indigenous Trade Diasporas and European Penetration of the Indian Ocean Littoral’ in Borsa, Giorgio (ed.), Trade and Politics in the Indian Ocean: History and Contemporary Perspectives. New Delhi: Manohar: 3346.Google Scholar
Mehta, S. D. 1954. The Cotton Mills of India 1854–1954. Bombay: Textile Association (India).Google Scholar
Menon, Sridevi. 2016. ‘Narrating Brunei: Travelling Histories of Brunei Indians’. Modern Asian Studies, 50/2: 718–64.Google Scholar
Meshtrie, Rajend, Kulkarni-Joshi, Sonal and Paradkar, Ruta. 2017. ‘Kokni in Capetown and the Sociolinguistics of Transnationalism’. Language Matters, 48/3: 3397.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Barbara Daly. 1982. Islam Revived in British India: Deoband, 1860–1900. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Thomas R. 1989. An Imperial Vision: India’s Architecture and Britain’s Raj. Berkeley/Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Thomas R. 2007a. Imperial Connections: India in the Indian Ocean Arena 1860–1920. Berkeley/Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Thomas. R. 2007b. ‘Projecting Power: The Indian Army Overseas’ in Imperial Connections: India in the Indian Ocean Arena 1860–1920. Delhi: Oxford University Press: 68101.Google Scholar
Meyer, Eric. 2003. ‘Labour Circulation between Sri Lanka and South India in Historical Perspective’ in Markovits, Claude, Pouchepadass, Jacques and Subrahmanyam, Sanjay (eds.), Society and Circulation: Mobile People and Itinerant Cultures in South Asia 1750–1950. New Delhi: Permanent Black: 5588.Google Scholar
Mill, James. 1817. The History of British India. London: Baldwin, Cradock & Joy.Google Scholar
Minault, Gail. 1982. The Khilafat Movement: Religious Symbolism and Political Mobilization in India. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mishra, Sauresh. 2011. Pilgrimage, Politics and Pestilence: The Haj from the Indian Subcontinent 1860–1920. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mishra, Vijay. 2007. Literature of the Indian Diaspora: Theorizing the Diasporic Imaginary. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Mitra, Dinabhandu. 1861. Nil Darpan (The Indigo Planting Mirror); A Play … Translated from Bengali into English by a Native. Calcutta: C.H. Manuel.Google Scholar
Mitter, Partha. 1990. ‘Artistic Responses to Colonialism in India: An Overview’ in Bayly, C. A. (ed.), India and the British 1600–1947. s.l. National Portrait Gallery: 361–7.Google Scholar
Moran, Dominic (ed. and commentator). 2009. Pablo Neruda, Veinte poemas de amor y una cancion desesperada. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Morgan, E. D. (ed.). 1886. Early Voyages and Travels to Russia and Persia by A. Jenkinson and Other Englishmen: With an Account of the First Intercourse of the English with Russia and Central Asia by Way of the Caspian Sea. London: Hakluyt Society.Google Scholar
Morris, Morris D. 1983. ‘The Growth of Large-Scale Industry to 1947’ in Kumar, Dharma (ed.), The Cambridge Economic History of India. Vol. II: c.1757–c.1970. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 553676.Google Scholar
Morris, R. J. 2013. ‘Bowld Irish Sepoy’ in Bates, Crispin and Carter, Marina (eds.), Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857. Vol. 3: Global Perspectives: Los Angeles/New Delhi: Sage: 98119.Google Scholar
Morton-Jack, George. 2014. The Indian Army on the Western Front: India’s Expeditionary Force to France and Belgium during the First World War. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mosca, Matthew W. 2013. From Frontier Policy to Foreign Policy: The Question of India and the Transformation of Geopolitics in Qing China. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Mulford, David Campbell. 1967. Zambia: The Politics of Independence, 1957–1964. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Murthy, C. S. R. 2007. ‘Unintended Consequences of Peace Operations for Troop-Contributing Countries from South Asia’ in Aoi, Chiyuli, Cedric de Coning and Thakur, Ramesh (eds.), Unintended Consequences of Peacekeeping Operations. Tokyo: United Nations University Press: 156–70.Google Scholar
Nadri, Ghulam H. 2015. ‘Sailors, Zielverkopers and the Dutch East India Company: The Maritime Labour Market in Eighteenth Century Surat’. Modern Asian Studies, 49/2: 336–64.Google Scholar
Naidu, Vijay. 2004. ‘Searching’ in Lal, Brij V. (ed.), Bittersweet: The Indo-Fijian Experience. Canberra: Pandanus Books: 373–86.Google Scholar
Naipaul, V. S. 1961. A House for Mr Biswas. London: André Deutsch.Google Scholar
Nakahara, Michiko. 2005. ‘Malayan Labour on the Thailand-Burma Railway’ in Kratoska, P. H. (ed.). Asian Labor in the Wartime Japanese Empire: Unknown Histories. New York: Armak: 247–62.Google Scholar
Nakajima, Takashi. 2009. Bose of Nakamuraya: An Indian Revolutionary in Japan (trans. from Japanese). New Delhi: Promilla & Co.Google Scholar
Nandy, Ashis. 1995. Alternative Sciences: Authenticity and Creativity in Two Indian Scientists. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Nandy, Ashis, Trivedy, Shikha, Mayaram, Shail and Yagnik, Achyut. 1997. Creating a Nationality: The Ramjanmabhumi Movement and Fear of the Self. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Naoroji, Dadabhai. 1901. Poverty and Un-British Rule in India. London: Swan Sonenschein.Google Scholar
Neruda, Pablo. 1969. Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair (trans. W. S. Merwin). London: Jonathan Cape.Google Scholar
Neruda, Pablo. 1997. Spain in the Heart: Hymn to the Glories of the People at War (1936–37) (trans. Richard Schaaf). New York: Azul Publications.Google Scholar
Noorani, A. G. 2002. Savarkar and Hindutva: The Godse Connection. New Delhi: Leftword Books.Google Scholar
Norris, James Alfred. 1967. The First Afghan War 1838–1842. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Oesterheld, Joachim. 2014. ‘Germans in India between Kaiserreich and the End of World War II’ in Cho, Joanne Miyang, Kurlander, Eric and McGetchin, Douglas T. (eds.), Transnational Encounters between Germany and India: Kindred Spirits in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Oxford/New York: Routledge: 101–14.Google Scholar
Okakura, Kakuzo. 1904. The Ideals of the East: With Special Reference to the Art of Japan. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
Olstein, Diego Adrian. 2014. Thinking History Globally. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
O’Malley, Kate. 2019. ‘Indian “Ulsterisation”, Ireland, India and Partition: The Infection of Example?’ in Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura (eds.), Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press: 111–27.Google Scholar
Omissi, David. 1994. The Sepoy and the Raj: The Indian Army 1860–1940. Basingstoke/London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Omissi, David (ed.). 1999. Indian Voices of the Great War: Soldiers’ Letters, 1914–18. Basingstoke/London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Osterhammel, Jürgen. 2014. The Transformation of the World: A Global History of the Nineteenth Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
O’Sullivan, Michael. 2018. ‘Pan-Islamic Bonds and Interest: Ottoman Bonds, Red Crescent Remittances and the Limits of Indian Muslim Capital, 1877–1924’. Indian Economic and Social History Review, 55/2: 183220.Google Scholar
Oxenford, John (trans.). 1984. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Conversations with Eckermann (1823–1832). San Francisco: North Point Press.Google Scholar
Palau de Nemes, Graciela. 1961. ‘Tagore and Jimenez, a Poetic Coincidence’ in Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli (ed.), Rabindranath Tagore 1861–1961 (A Centenary). New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi: 187–97.Google Scholar
Palmer, Colin A. 2010. Cheddi Jagan and the Politics of Power: British Guiana’s Struggle for Independence. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Pandian, Anand and Mariappan, M. P. 2014. Ayya’s Accounts: A Ledger of Hope in Modern India. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press.Google Scholar
Panteli, Stavros. 2000. A History of Cyprus: From Foreign Domination to Troubled Independence. London: East-West.Google Scholar
Paremmakkal, Cathanar Thomman. 1971. The Varthamanapusthakam: An Account of the History of the Malabar Church between the Years 1773 and 1786 … and the Journey from Malabar to Rome via Lisbon and Back, trans. Placid J. Podipara. Rome: Pont: Institutum Orientalium Studiorum.Google Scholar
Parthasarathi, Prasannan. 2001. The Transition to a Colonial Economy: Weavers, Merchants and Kings in South India 1720–1800. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Partridge, Christopher. 2013. ‘Lost Horizon: H.P. Blavatsky and Theosophical Orientalism’ in Hammer, Olav and Rothenstein, Mikael (eds.), Handbook of the Theosophical Current. Leiden/Boston: Brill: 309–33.Google Scholar
Patel, Zarina. 2006. Unquiet: The Life and Times of Makhan Singh. Nairobi: Zand Graphics.Google Scholar
Patterson, J. Brunlees (‘Wanderer’). 1885? Life in the Ranks of the British Army in India and on Board a Troopship. London: John & Robert Maxwell.Google Scholar
Pennington, Brian K. 2005. Was Hinduism Invented? Britons, Indians and the Colonial Constitution of Religion. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Pepys, Samuel. 2003. The Diary of Samuel Pepys: A Selection. London: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Pétriat, Philippe. 2016. Le Négoce des Lieux Saints: Négociants Hadramis de Djedda, 1850–1950. Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne.Google Scholar
Platt, Stephen R. 2012. Autumn in the Heavenly Kingdom: China, the West, and the Epic Story of the Taiping Civil War. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.Google Scholar
Pollock, Sheldon. 2006. The Language of Gods in the World of Men: Sanskrit, Culture and Power in Pre-modern South Asia. Berkeley/Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Powell, Avril Ann. 1993. Muslims and Missionaries in Pre-mutiny India. Richmond: Curzon.Google Scholar
Pradhan, Satyendra Dev. 1991. Indian Army in East Africa 1914–1918. New Delhi: National Book Organisation.Google Scholar
Prakash, Om. 1985. The Dutch East India Company and the Trade of Bengal. Princeton/London: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Prakash, Om. 2004. Bullion for Goods: European and Asian Merchants in the Indian Ocean Trade 1500–1800. New Delhi: Manohar.Google Scholar
Puliurumpil, James Abraham. 2013. History of the Syro-Malabar Church. Kottayam: Oriental Institute of Religious Studies.Google Scholar
Radice, William. 2017. ‘Gitanjali Reborn, One Hundred Years Later: The Story of a Discovery’ in Martin, Kämpchen (ed.), Gitanjali Reborn: William Radice’s Writings on Rabindranath Tagore. New Delhi: Social Science Press: 3870.Google Scholar
Raj, Kapil. 2006. ‘Defusing Diffusionism: The Institutionalization of Modern Science Education in Early Nineteenth Century Bengal’ in Relocating Modern Science: Circulation and the Construction of Scientific Knowledge in South Asia and Europe, Seventeenth to Nineteenth Centuries. New Delhi: Permanent Black: 159–80.Google Scholar
Rajadhyaksha, Ashish. 2008. ‘The “Bollywoodization” of the Indian Cinema: Cultural Nationalism in a Global Arena’ in Kavoori, Anandam P. and Punathambekar, Aswim (eds.), Global Bollywood. New York/London: New York University Press: 1740.Google Scholar
Rajadhyaksha, Ashish. 2016. Indian Cinema: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rajagopalan, Sudha. 2008. Indian Films in Soviet Cinemas: The Culture of Movie-Going after Stalin. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press.Google Scholar
Rai, Rajesh. 2013. ‘The 1857 Panic and the Fabrication of an Indian “Menace” in Singapore’. Modern Asian Studies, 47/2: 365405.Google Scholar
Ramnath, Maia. 2011. Haj to Utopia: How the Ghadar Movement Charted Global Radicalism and Attempted to Overthrow the British Empire. Berkeley/Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh and Sivaramakrishnan, K. 2014. Shifting Ground: People, Animals and Mobility in India’s Environmental History. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ray, Rabindra. 2002. The Naxalites and Their Ideology. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ray, Rajat Kanta. 1995. ‘Asian Capital in the Age of European Domination: The Rise of the Bazaar, 1800–1914’. Modern Asian Studies, 29/3: 449554.Google Scholar
Ray, Rajat Kanta. 2004. ‘Race, Religion and Realm: The Political Theory of “The Reigning Indian Crusade” 1857’ in Hasan, Mushirul and Gupta, Narayani, India’s Colonial Encounter: Essays in Memory of Eric Stokes. New Delhi: Manohar: 205–54.Google Scholar
Raychaudhuri, Tapan. 1988. Europe Reconsidered: Perceptions of the West in Nineteenth Century Bengal. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Reichel, Claudia. 2011. ‘German Responses: Theodor Fontane, Edgar Bauer, Wilhelm Liebknecht’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 1941.Google Scholar
Richards, John F. 1981. ‘The Indian Empire and Peasant Production of Opium in the Nineteenth Century’. Modern Asian Studies, 15/1: 5982.Google Scholar
Riello, Giorgio. 2009. ‘The India Apprenticeship: The Trade of Indian Textiles and the Making of European Cotton’ in Riello, Giorgio and Roy, Tirthankar (eds.), How India Clothed the World: The World of South Asian Textiles 1500–1850. Leiden/Boston: Brill: 309–46.Google Scholar
Rolland, Romain. 1924. Mahatma Gandhi. Paris: Stock.Google Scholar
Roy, Tirthankar. 1999. Traditional Industry in the Economy of Colonial India. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Roy, Tirthankar. 2010. Company of Kinsmen: Enterprise and Community in South Asian History 1700–1940. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Roy, Tirthankar and Haynes, Douglas. 2013. ‘Mobile Artisans’ in Chatterji, Joya and Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora. London/New York: Routledge: 4352.Google Scholar
Rudner, D. W. 1994. Caste and Capitalism in Colonial India: The Nattukottai Chettiars. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Rush, Dana. 1999. ‘Eternal Potential: Chromolithographs in Vodunland’. African Arts, 33/4: 6075.Google Scholar
Rushdie, Salman and West, Elizabeth (eds.). 1997. Mirrorwork: Fifty Years of Indian Writing 1947–1997. London: Henry Holt.Google Scholar
Rutledge, Ian. 2014. Enemy on the Euphrates: The British Occupation of Iraq and the Great Arab Revolt 1914–1921. London: Saqi.Google Scholar
Rye, Ajit Singh. 1993. ‘The Indian Community in the Philippines’ in Mani, A. K. and Sandhu, K. S. (eds.), Indian Communities in Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies: 708–74.Google Scholar
Said, Edward W. 1978. Orientalism. London/Henley: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Samaroo, Brinsley. 1974. ‘Politics and Afro-Indian Relations in Trinidad’ in La Guerre, John (ed.), Calcutta to Caroni: The East Indians of Trinidad. London: Longman: 8497.Google Scholar
Sarkar, Jadunath. 2017. Shivaji and His Times. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan.Google Scholar
Sartori, Andrew. 2017. ‘C.A. Bayly and the Question of Indian Political Thought’. Modern Asian Studies, 51/3: 867–77.Google Scholar
Saruski, Jaime. 1989. ‘The East Indian Community in Cuba’ in Birbalsingh, Frank (ed.), Indenture and Exile: The Indo-Caribbean Experience. Toronto: TSAR: 73–8.Google Scholar
Savarkar, Vinayak Damodar. 1909? The Indian War of Independence, by an Indian Nationalist. s.l.Google Scholar
Savarkar, Vinayak Damodar. 1923. Hindutva: Who Is a Hindu? Poona: S.P. Gokhale.Google Scholar
Schlegel, Carl Wilhelm Friedrich von. 2001. On the Wisdom and Language of the Indians (trans. from German). London: Ganesa Publications.Google Scholar
Schwartz, R. P. 1956. ‘French Documents on Indian Cotton Painting (I): The Beaulieu Ms, c. 1734’. Journal of Indian Textile History, II: 523.Google Scholar
Scott, Paul. 1977. Staying On. Bombay: Allied Publishers.Google Scholar
Seager, Richard Hughes. 1995. The World’s Parliament of Religions: The East/West Encounter, Chicago, 1893. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Seager, Richard Hughes. 2006. Encountering the Dharma: Daisuku Ikeda, Soka Gakkai, and the Globalization of Buddhist Humanism. Berkeley/Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Sen, Keshub Chandra. 1888. Diary in Ceylon, from 27th September to 5th November 1859. Calcutta: Brahmo Trust Society.Google Scholar
Sen, Simonti. 2005. Travels to Europe: Self and Other in Bengali Travel Narratives 1870–1910. New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Sen, Simonti. 2010. ‘Rabindranath Tagore and Hariprabha Takeda: Two Tales of Japan’ in Mandal, Somdatta (ed.), Indian Travel Narratives. Jaipur: Rawat Publications: 90114.Google Scholar
Sen, Surendra Nath. 1957. Eighteen Fifty Seven. New Delhi: Government of India Publications.Google Scholar
Sengupta, Parna. 2011. Pedagogy for Religion: Missionary Education and the Fashioning of Hindus and Muslims in Bengal. Berkeley/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Seth, Merop Jacob. 1937. Armenians in India from the Early Times to the Present Day. Calcutta: Self-Published.Google Scholar
Shah, Alpa and Pettigrew, Joyce. 2009. ‘Windows into a Revolution: Ethnographies of Maoism in South Asia’. Introduction to special collected edition of Dialectical Anthropology, 33–4: 225–51.Google Scholar
Sharma, Rekha and Annamalai, E. (eds.). 2003. Indian Diaspora in Search of Identity. Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.Google Scholar
Shlomowitz, Ralph and McDonald, John. 1990. ‘Mortality of Indian Labour on Ocean Voyages 1843–1917’. Studies in History, 6/1: 3565.Google Scholar
Sikand, Yoginder. 2002. The Origins and Development of the Tablighi Jama’at (1920–2000): A Cross-Country Comparative Study. New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Simmons, Adele Smith. 1982. Modern Mauritius: The Politics of Decolonization. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Singh, Harkarat. 2007. Intervention in Sri Lanka: The IPKF Experience Retold. New Delhi: Manohar.Google Scholar
Sinha-Kerkhoff, Kathinka, Bal, Ellen and Deo Singh, Alok (eds. and trans.). 2005. ‘Jeevan Prakash’: Autobiography of an Indian Indentured Labourer, Munshi Rahman Khan (1874–1972). Delhi: Shipra.Google Scholar
Spear, Richard E. 2008. ‘Colonial Collectors: The Tata Bequests of Nineteenth Century European Paintings in the Mumbai Museum’. The Burlington Magazine, 150/1: 1527.Google Scholar
Speckman, Johan D. 1965. Marriage and Kinship among Indians in Surinam. Assen: Van Gorcum.Google Scholar
Stanley, Peter. 2002. ‘“Great in Adversity”: Indian Prisoners of War in New Guinea’. Journal of the Australian War Memorial, 37.Google Scholar
Steene, Gwanda Vander. 2008. ‘“Hindu” Dance Groups and Indophilia in Senegal: The Imagination of the Exotic Other’ in Hawley, John C. (ed.), India in Africa, Africa in India: Indian Ocean Cosmopolitanisms. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press: 117–47.Google Scholar
Stern, Philip J. 2011. The Company State: Corporate Sovereignty and the Early Modern Foundations of the British Empire in India. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Stokes, Eric (ed. Bayly, C. A. ). 1986. The Peasant Armed: The Indian Rebellion of 1857. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Streets, Heather. 2004. Martial Races: The Military, Race and Masculinity in British Imperial Culture, 1857–1914. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay. 1997. The Career and Legend of Vasco de Gama. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay. 2001. ‘Introduction: The Indian Ocean World and Ashin Das Gupta’ in The Worlds of the Indian Ocean 1500–1800: Collected Writings of Ashin Das Gupta, Compiled by Uma Das Gupta. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 14.Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay. 2005. Explorations in Connected History. Mughals and Franks: From the Tagus to the Ganges, 2 vols. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Swanepoel, Christiaan. 2012. ‘Writing and Publishing in African Languages since 1948’ in Attwell, David and Attridge, Derek (eds.), The Cambridge History of South African Literature. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press: 607–32.Google Scholar
Tan, Chung and Wei, Liming. 2014. ‘China’ in Kämpchen, Martin and Bargha, Imre (eds.), Rabindranath Tagore: One Hundred Years of Global Reception. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan: 3856.Google Scholar
Tandan, Banmali. 2001. The Architecture of Lucknow and Its Dependencies 1722–1856: A Descriptive Inventory and an Analysis of Nawabi Types. New Delhi: Vikas.Google Scholar
Takahashi, Yuri. 2012. ‘The Case-Book of Mr San Shar: Burmese Society and Nationalist Thought in the 1930s as Seen in the Burmese Sherlock Holmes Stories’, artsonline.monash.edu.au/mai/files/2012/07/yuritakahashi.pdf.Google Scholar
Thakurdas, Purshottamdas et al. 1944–5. A Plan of Economic Development for India. Bombay: Commercial Printing Press.Google Scholar
Thampi, Madhavi. 2005. Indians in China 1800–1949. New Delhi: Manohar.Google Scholar
Thapar, Romilla. 2010. Sakuntala: Texts, Readings, Histories. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Thiara, Ravi K. 1999. ‘The African-Indian Antithesis? The 1949 Durban “Riots” in South Africa’ in Brah, Avtar, Hickman, Mary J. and Ghaill, Martin Mac An (eds.), Thinking Identities: Ethnicity, Racism and Culture. Basingstoke: Macmillan: 161–84.Google Scholar
Thoreau, Henry David. c.1997. Walden, with an Introduction and Annotations by Bill McKibben. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Timberg, Thomas A. 1978. The Marwaris: From Traders to Industrialists. Delhi: Vikas.Google Scholar
Tinker, Hugh. 1974. A New System of Slavery: The Export of Indian Labour Overseas 1830–1920. London/Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Tracy, Nicholas. 1995. Manila Ransomed: The British Assault on Manila in the Seven Years War. Exeter: University of Exeter Press.Google Scholar
Travilian, Taylor (ed.). 2015. Pliny the Elder, The Natural History, Book VII. London: Bloomsbury Academic.Google Scholar
Tsui, Brian. 2015. ‘Decolonization and Revolution: Debating Gandhism in Republican China’. Modern China, 41/1: 5989.Google Scholar
Tumbe, Chinmay. 2017. ‘Transnational Indian Business in the Twentieth Century’. Business History Review, 91/4: 651–79.Google Scholar
Twaddle, Michael (ed.). 1975. Expulsion of a Minority: Essays on Ugandan Asians. London: Athlone Press.Google Scholar
Tzoref-Ashkenazi, Chen. 2015. German Soldiers in Colonial India. London: Pickering & Chatto.Google Scholar
Vaid, Kanwal Narain. 1972. The Indian Overseas Community in Hong Kong. University of Hong Kong.Google Scholar
Vanden Eynde, Oliver. 2015. ‘Military Service and Human Capital Accumulation: Evidence from Colonial Punjab’, www.parisschoolofeconomics.eu/docs/vanden-eynde-oliver/military-service-colonial-pujab-pdf.Google Scholar
Van der Linden, Marcel (ed.). 2011. Humanitarian Intervention and Changing Labor Relations: The Long-Term Consequences of the Abolition of the Slave Trade. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Venkataraman, Vijaya. 2011. ‘El dragon del fuego: A Dramatic Representation of the Revolt’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 278–88.Google Scholar
Versluis, Arthur. 1993. American Transcendentalism and Asian Religions. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Visram, Rozina. 2002. Asians in Britain: 400 Years of History. London: Pluto Press.Google Scholar
Vivekananda, Swami. 1909. East and West. Madras: Brahmavadin Office.Google Scholar
Wallace, R. D. 1928. The Romance of Jute: A Short History of the Calcutta Jute Mill Industry, 1855–1927. London: W. Thacker & Co.Google Scholar
Washbrook, David. 2012. ‘The Indian Economy and the British Empire’ in Peers, Douglas M. and Gooptu, Nandini (eds.), India and the British Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 4474.Google Scholar
Webb, Maurice and Kirkwood, Kenneth. 1949. The Durban Riots and After. Johannesburg: Institute of Race Relations.Google Scholar
Weber, Max. 1958. The Religion of India: The Sociology of Hinduism and Buddhism (ed. and trans. Hans Gerth and Don Martindale). Glencoe, IL: Free Press.Google Scholar
Weber, Thomas. 1988. Hugging the Trees: The Story of the Chipko Movement. Delhi: Viking India.Google Scholar
Wickramasinghe, Nira. 2006. Sri Lanka in the Modern Age: A History of Contested Identities. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Williams, C. V. 2004. Jiddu Krisnamurti, World Philosopher (1895–1986): His Life and Thought. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.Google Scholar
Williams, Donovan. 1987. ‘The Indian Mutiny of 1857 at the Cape Colony, Part II: The Emergence of Black Consciousness in Caffraria’. Historia, 32/2: 5667.Google Scholar
Wink, André. 1990. Al Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World. Vol. 1: Early Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam, 7th–11th Centuries. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Yadav, B. D. and Bakshi, S. R. 1991. Madam Bhikhamji Cama. New Delhi: Anmol.Google Scholar
Yakpo, Kofi and Muysken, Pieter. 2014. ‘Language Change in a Multiple Contact Setting: The Case of Sarnami (Suriname)’ in Buchstaller, Isabel, Holmberg, Anders and Almoally, Mohammad (eds.), Pidgins and Creoles beyond African-European Encounters. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamin: 101–40.Google Scholar
Yang, Anand A. 2003. ‘Indian Convict Workers in Southeast Asia in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries’. Journal of World History, 14/2: 179208.Google Scholar
Yang, Anand A. 2007. ‘(A) Subaltern(’s) Boxers: An Indian Soldier’s Account of China and the World in 19001901’ in Bickers, Robert and Tiedemann, R. G. (eds.), The Boxers, China and the World. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield: 4364.Google Scholar
Yang, Anand A. (ed. and trans.). 2017. Thirteen Months in China: A Subaltern Indian and the Colonial World. An Annotated Translation of Thakur Gadadhar Singh’s ‘Chin me tera mas. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Young, Desmond. 1959. Fountain of the Elephants (An Account of the Life of Count Benoît De Boigne). London: Collins.Google Scholar
Zachariah, Benjamin. 2010. ‘Rethinking (the Absence of) Fascism in India, c.1922–1945’ in Bose, Sugata and Manjapra, Kris (eds.), Cosmopolitan Thought Zones: South Asia and the Global Circulation of Ideas. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan:178209.Google Scholar
Cao, Yin. 2015. ‘Red Turbans on the Bund: Sikh Migrants, Policemen and Revolutionaries in Shanghai 1885–1945’. Unpublished PhD thesis, National University of Singapore.Google Scholar
Ebeling, Sascha. 2016. ‘From Malayalam Modernism to Global Modernism: Mahakavi Kumaran Asan’s “The Fallen Flower” (1907) and the Question of the Subject’. Paris: Centre of Indian and South Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Aziz, Abdul. 1945. The Mansabdari System and the Mughal Army. Lahore.Google Scholar
Munshi, Abdullah. 1955. Hikayat Abdullah. Trans. A. H. Hill. Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 28/3: 171.Google Scholar
Acharyya, Snehangshu Kanta and Saha, Mahadev Prasad (eds.) 1957. The Revolt of Hindustan or, The New World by Ernest Jones, with a New Introduction and Other Prose Writings of the Poet on the Revolt of 1857. Calcutta: Eastern Trading Co.Google Scholar
Ahmed, Rafiuddin. 1981. The Bengal Muslims 1871–1906: A Quest for Identity. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Alam, Muzaffar. 2004. The Languages of Political Islam in India c. 1200–1800. New Delhi: Permanent Black.Google Scholar
Ali, Ahmed. 1940. Twilight in Delhi. London: Hogarth Press.Google Scholar
Allen, Calvin H. 1981. ‘The Indian Merchant Community of Masqat’. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 44: 3953.Google Scholar
Amrith, Sunil S. 2013. Crossing the Bay of Bengal: The Furies of Nature and the Fortunes of Migrants. Cambridge, MA/London: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Anand, Mulk Raj. 1940 (2000). Across the Black Waters. New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Anderson, Clare. 2012. Subaltern Lives: Biographies of Colonialism in the Indian Ocean World 1790–1920. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Army Training Command. 1997. The Indian Army: United Nations Peacekeeping Operations. New Delhi: Lancer/London: Spartech & Lancer.Google Scholar
Arnold, David. 1983. ‘White Colonization and Labour in Nineteenth-Century India’. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 11/2: 133–58.Google Scholar
Arnold, David. 2000. Science, Technology and Medicine in Colonial India: The New Cambridge History of India, III-5. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aslanian, Sebouh David. 2011. From the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean: The Global Trade Networks of Armenian Merchants from New Julfa. Berkeley/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Avineri, Shlomo (ed.) 1969. Karl Marx on Colonialism and Modernization. New York: Archer.Google Scholar
Azhar, Ahmad. 2019. Revolution in Reform: Trade-Unionism in Lahore, c. 1920–70. Hyderabad: Orient BlackSwan.Google Scholar
Bagchi, Amiya Kumar. 1972. Private Investment in India 1900–1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Balachandran, Gopalan. 1996. John’s Bullion Empire: Britain’s Gold Problem and India between the Wars. Richmond: Curzon Press.Google Scholar
Balachandran, Gopalan. 2012. Globalizing Labour? Indian Seafarers and World Shipping, c. 1870–1945. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bald, Vivek. 2013. Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America. Cambridge, MA/London: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Banaji, Jairus. 2013. Fascism: Essays on Europe and India. New Delhi: Three Essays Collective.Google Scholar
Bandhopadhyay, P. K. 2011. Sepoys in the British Overseas Expeditions. Calcutta: K.P. Bagchi & Co.Google Scholar
Banerjee, Payal. 2007. ‘Chinese Indians in “Fire”: Refraction of Ethnicity, Gender, Sexuality and Citizenship in Post-Colonial India’s Memory of the Sino-Indian War’. China Report, 43/4: 437–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banks, Marcus. 1992. Organizing Jainism in India and England. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bates, Crispin and Carter, Marina. (eds.) 2013. Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857. Vol. 3: Global Perspectives. Los Angeles/New Delhi: Sage.Google Scholar
Baugh, D. 2011. The Global Seven Years War 1754–1763: Britain and France in a Great Power Contest. Harlow: Longman.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 1989. Imperial Meridian: The British Empire and the World, 1780–1830. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 2004a. The Birth of the Modern World 1780–1914: Global Connections and Comparisons. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 2004b. ‘Eric Thomas Stokes 1924–1981’ in Hasan, Mushirul and Gupta, Narayani (eds.), India’s Colonial Encounter: Essays in Memory of Eric Stokes. New Delhi: Manohar: 338.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 2007. ‘The Boxer Uprising and India: Globalizing Myths’ in Bickers, Robert and Tiedemann, R. G. (eds.), The Boxers, China and the World. Lanham, MD/Plymouth: Rowman & Littlefield: 147–55.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan. 2012. Recovering Liberties: Indian Thought in the Age of Liberalism and Empire. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher Alan and Harper, Tim. 2004. Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia 1941–1945. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Bayly, Susan. 2004. ‘Imagining “Greater India”: French and Indian Visions of Colonialism in the Indic Mode’. Modern Asian Studies, 38/3: 703–44.Google Scholar
Bean, Susan. 2001. Yankee India: American Commercial and Cultural Encounters with India in the Age of Sail 1784–1860. Salem, MA: Peabody Essex Museum/Ahmedabad: Mapin Publishing.Google Scholar
Beaton, Patrick. 1971 (1859). Creoles and Coolies, or Five Years in Mauritius. Port Washington/New York/London: Kennikat Press.Google Scholar
Beaurline, L. A. and Bowers, Fredson (eds.) 1967. John Dryden, Four Tragedies. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Beckerlegge, Gwylynn. 2000. The Ramakrishna Mission: The Making of a Modern Hindu Movement. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Beckert, Sven. 2014. Empire of Cotton: A New History of Global Capitalism. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Belich, James. 1986. The New Zealand Wars and the Victorian Interpretation of Racial Conflict. Auckland: Auckland University Press.Google Scholar
Belle, Carl Valdivella. 2015. Tragic Orphans: Indians in Malaysia. Singapore: Institute of South-East Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Bender, Jill C. 2016. The 1857 Indian Uprising and the British Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Benyamin, , 2012. Goat Days. Trans. from Malayalam. New Delhi: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Bernier, François. 1969. Travels in the Mogul Empire A.D. 1656–1668. Delhi: S. Chand & Co.Google Scholar
Berry, Mary Elizabeth. 1982. Hideyoshi. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Bess, M. 1993. ‘Peace through Social Transformation: Danilo Dolci’s Long Range Experiments with Gandhian Nonviolence’ in Bess, M. (ed.), Realism, Utopia and the Mushroom Cloud: Four Activist Intellectuals and Their Strategies for Peace 1945–1989. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press: 155217.Google Scholar
Betta, Chiara. 2005. ‘The Trade Diaspora of Baghdadi Jews: From India to China’s Treaty Ports’ in McCabe, Ina Baghdiantz, Harlaftis, Gelina and Minoglou, Ioanna Peplasis (eds.), Diaspora Entrepreneurial Networks: Four Centuries of History. Oxford/New York: Berg: 269–86.Google Scholar
Bettelheim, Charles. 1968. India Independent. London: MacGibbon and Kee.Google Scholar
Bhatawadekar, Sai. 2014. ‘Claims and Disclaimers: Schopenhauer and the Cross-Cultural Comparative Enterprise’ in Cho, Joanne Miyang, Kurlander, Eric and McGetchin, Douglas T. (eds.), Transnational Encounters between Germany and India: Kindred Spirits in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Oxford/New York: Routledge: 3751.Google Scholar
Bhattacharjee, Anuradha. 2012. The Second Homeland: Polish Refugees in India; with the Chronicle of Franek Herzog. Los Angeles: Sage.Google Scholar
Bhattacharya, Anil (ed.). 2009. Acharya Profulla Chandra Ray: A Collection of Writings. Calcutta: Calcutta University.Google Scholar
Bhatti, Anil and Voigt, Johannes H. (eds.). 1999. Jewish Exile in India 1933–1945. New Delhi: Manohar.Google Scholar
Bhatti, Anil. 2011. ‘Retcliffe’s Nana Sahib and the German Discourse on India’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 137–51.Google Scholar
Biddulph, J. J. 1901. Stringer Lawrence, Father of the Indian Army. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
Birla, G. D. 1953. In the Shadow of the Mahatma: A Personal Memoir. Bombay: Orient Longmans.Google Scholar
Birla, Ritu. 2009. Stages of Capital: Law, Culture, and Market Governance in Late Colonial India. Durham/London: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Bishara, Fahad Ahmad. 2017. A Sea of Debt: Law and Economic Life in the Western Indian Ocean, 1780–1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bonnerjee, Joyani. 2015. ‘Beyond Boundaries’: Hindu Spaces in the Chinatowns of Kolkata and Singapore’ in Bhattacharya, Jayati (ed.), Indian and Chinese Immigrant Communities: Comparative Perspectives. Singapore: Institute of South-East Asian Studies/London: Anthem Press Anthem Press: 153–164.Google Scholar
Bose, Sugata and Manjapra, Kris (eds.). 2010. Cosmopolitan Thought Zones: South Asia and the Global Circulation of Ideas. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Braudel, Fernand. 1972/3. The Mediterranean in the Time of Philip II. London: Collins.Google Scholar
Branson, Clive. 1945. British Soldier in India: The Letters of Clive Branson. London: The Communist Party of Great Britain.Google Scholar
Brodie, Nick. 2018. ‘Once Upon a Muslim Tasmania’. 40 Degrees South, 91: 4851.Google Scholar
Martin, Buber. 1966. ‘Letter to Mahatma Gandhi’, February 1939, in Meyer, P. (ed.), The Pacifist Conscience. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books: 269–82.Google Scholar
Burnes, Alexander. 1834 (reprint 1973). Travels into Bokhara: Together with a Narrative of a Voyage on the Indus. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
Campbell, Bruce F. 1980. Ancient Wisdom Revived: A History of the Theosophical Movement. Berkeley/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Campbell, Gwynn (ed.). 2004. The Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. London/Portland, OR: Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Carey, Peter. 1977. ‘The Sepoy Conspiracy of 1815 in Java’. Bijdragen tot de Taal, Land-en Volkenkunde, 133: 294322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carson, Clayborne (ed.). 1998. The Autobiography of Martin Luther King. New York: Warner Books.Google Scholar
Carter, Marina. 1995. Servants, Sirdars and Settlers: Indians in Mauritius 1834–1874. Delhi/Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 1989. Rethinking Working-Class History: Bengal 1890–1940. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 2000. Provincializing Europe: Post-Colonial Thought and Historical Difference. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 2002. ‘A Small History of Subaltern Studies’ in Habitations of Modernity: Essays in the Wake of Subaltern Studies. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press: 319.Google Scholar
Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 2018. ‘Anthropocene Time’. History and Theory, 57/1: 532.Google Scholar
Chakravarti, Nalini Ranjan. 1971. The Indian Minority of Burma: Rise and Decline of an Immigrant Community. London/New York/Bombay: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Chandavarkar, Raj. 1993. The Origins of Industrial Capitalism in India: Business Strategies and the Working Classes in Bombay 1900–1940. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chandler, D. G. 1967. ‘The Expedition to Abyssinia 1867–68’ in Bond, Brian (ed.), Victorian Military Campaigns. London: Hutchinson & Co: 107–59.Google Scholar
Chatterjee, Partha. 1986. Nationalist Thought and the Colonial World: A Derivative Discourse? London: Zed Books.Google Scholar
Chattopadhyay, Suchetana. 2011. An Early Communist: Muzaffar Ahmad in Calcutta, 1913–1929. New Delhi: Tulika Books.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, K. N. 1985. Trade and Civilization in the Indian Ocean: An Economic History from the Rise of Islam to 1750. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, Sashi Bhusan. 1957. Civil Rebellion in the Indian Mutinies 1857–1859. Calcutta: World Press.Google Scholar
Chaudhuri, Sukanta (ed.). 1998. A Certain Sense. Poems by Jibanananda Das. Calcutta: Sahitya Akademi.Google Scholar
Chen, Dasheng and Lombard, Denys. 2000. ‘Foreign Merchants in Maritime Trade in “Qanzhou” (“Zeitun”), Thirteen and Fourteenth Centuries’ in Lombard, Denys and Aubin, Jean (eds.), Asian Merchants and Businessmen in the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 1923.Google Scholar
Cherubini, Chiara. 2011. ‘Freedom and Democracy: The Revolt in the Italian Press’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 6380.Google Scholar
Chester, Lucy. 2019. ‘“Close Parallels”? Interrelated Discussion of Partition in South Asia and the Palestine Mandate (1936–1948)’ in Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura (eds.), Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press: 128–53.Google Scholar
Choudhury, Rishad. 2016. ‘The Hajj and the Hindi: The Ascent of the Indian Sufi Lodge in the Ottoman Empire’. Modern Asian Studies, 50/6: 18881931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chowdhury, Prem. 2000. Colonial India and the Making of Empire Cinema: Image, Ideology and Identity. Manchester/New York: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Chowdhury, Prita and Chaliha, Joyoti. 1990. ‘The Jews of Calcutta’ in Chaudhuri, Sukanta (ed.), Calcutta, The Living City. Volume I: The Past. Calcutta: Oxford University Press: 52–3.Google Scholar
Clark, T. W. (ed.). 1970. The Novel in India: Its Birth and Development. London: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Codell, Julie F. 2003. ‘Ironies of Mimicry: The Art Collection of Sayaji Rao III Gaekwad, Maharaja of Baroda, and the Cultural Policies of Early Modern India’. Journal of the History of Collections, 15/1: 127–46.Google Scholar
Cole, Juan Ricardo I. 1988. Roots of North Indian Shi’ism in Iran and Iraq. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Cole, Juan Ricardo I. 1989. ‘Of Crowds and Empires: Afro-Asian Riots and European Expansion 1857–1882’. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 31/1: 106–33.Google Scholar
Collingham, Elizabeth M., 2001. Imperial Bodies: The Physical Experience of the Raj, c. 1800–1947. Cambridge: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Cortesao, Armando (ed.). 1944. The Suma Oriental of Tomé Pires. London: Hakluyt Society.Google Scholar
Dale, Stephen. 1994. Indian Merchants and Eurasian Trade 1600–1750. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dalmia, Yasodhara (ed.). 2014. Amrita Sher-Gil, Art and Life: A Reader. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Damosch, David. 2003. What Is World Literature? Princeton/Woodstock: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Darling, Malcolm. 1934. Wisdom and Work in the Punjab Village. London: Humphrey Milford/Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Das Gupta, Ashin. 1967. Malabar in Asian Trade 1740–1800. London/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dasgupta, Swati. 2011. ‘Lost in Translation: Jules Verne and the Indian Rebellion’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 221–37.Google Scholar
Davis, Mike. 2000. Late Victorian Holocausts: El Nino Famines and the Origins of the Third World. London/New York: Verso.Google Scholar
Dawood, Yusuf K. 2000. Return to Paradise. Nairobi/Kampala/Dar-es-Salaam: East African Educational Publishers.Google Scholar
De Cecco, Marcello. 1974. Money and Empire: The International Gold Standard 1890–1914. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
De Lepervanche, Mary M. 1984. Indians in a White Australia: An Account of Race, Class and Indian Migration to Eastern Australia. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
De Meuron, Guy. 1982. Le Régiment Meuron, 1781–1816. Lausanne: Le Forum Historique.Google Scholar
Desai, Anita. 1988. Baumgartner’s Bombay. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Desai, Rashmikant Harilal. 1963. Indian Immigrants in Britain. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Devarajoo, Karthiyaini. 2009. ‘Transforming Diaspora’ in Kadekar, Laxmi Narayan, Sahoo, Ajaya Kumar and Bhattacharya, Gauri (eds.), The Indian Diaspora: Historical and Contemporary Context. New Delhi: Rawat Publications: 135–47.Google Scholar
Devika, J. 2018. ‘Decolonizing Nationalist Racism? Reflections on Travel Writing from Mid-Twentieth Century Kerala, India’. Modern Asian Studies, 52/4: 1316–46.Google Scholar
Devji, Faisal. 2019. ‘From Minority to Nation’ in Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura (eds.), Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press: 3155.Google Scholar
Dew, Edward. 1978. The Difficult Flowering of Surinam: Ethnicity and Politics in a Plural Society. The Hague: Nijhoff.Google Scholar
Diderot, Denis and d’Alembert, Jean Le Rond. 1751. Encyclopédie ou dictionnaire raisonné des sciences, des arts et des métiers, vol. XIV. Paris.Google Scholar
Disney, Anthony R. 2009. A History of Portugal and the Portuguese Empire from Beginnings to 1807. Volume 2: The Portuguese Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Doshi, Saryu (ed.). 1995. The Royal Bequest: Art Treasures of the Baroda Museum and Picture Gallery. Bombay: India Book House.Google Scholar
Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura. 2019. Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Dutt, Romesh Chunder. 1902. The Economic History of India. London: K. Paul, Trübner, Trench & Co.Google Scholar
Dutt, Toru. 1878. Le Journal de Mlle d’Arvers, nouvelle écrite en français par Toru Dutt, jeune et célèbre hindoue de Calcutta morte en 1877. Paris: Librairie Académique Didier & Cie.Google Scholar
Ebeling, Sascha and Trento, Margherita. 2018. ‘From Jesuit Missionary to Tamil Pulavar: Costanzo Gioseffo Beschi SJ (1680–1747), the “Great Heroic Sage”’ in Leucci, Tiziana, Markovits, Claude and Fourcade, Marie (eds.), L’Inde et l’Italie: Rencontres intellectuelles, politiques et artistiques. Paris: Editions de l’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Collection Purusartha 35: 5389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Egreteau, Renaud. 2011. ‘Burmese Indians in Contemporary Burma: Heritage, Influence and Perceptions since 1988’. Race and Ethnicity, 12/1: 3354.Google Scholar
Eleftheriotis, Dimitris. 2006. ‘“A Cultural Colony of India”: Indian Films in Greece in the 1950s and 1960s’. South Asian Popular Culture, 4/2: 101–12.Google Scholar
EllinwoodJr., DeWitt C. (ed.). 2005. Between Two Worlds: A Rajput Officer in the Indian Army 1905–1921, Based on the Diary of Amar Singh of Jaipur. Lanham, MD/Oxford: Hamilton Books.Google Scholar
Emerson, Ralph Waldo. 2015. The Major Poetry, ed. with intro. and commentary by Albert J. von Frank. Cambridge, MA/London: Bellknap Press.Google Scholar
Evenson, Norma. 1966. Chandigarh. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Fairbank, John K. 1964. Trade and Diplomacy on the China Coast: The Opening of the Treaty Ports 1842–1854. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Farnie, Douglas Anthony. 1979. The English Cotton Industry and the World Market 1815–1896. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Farooqi, Amar. 1998. Smuggling as Subversion: Colonialism, Indian Merchants and the Politics of Opium. New Delhi: New Age International.Google Scholar
Fichter, James R. 2010. ‘So Great a Proffit’: How the East Indian Trade Transformed Anglo-American Capitalism. Cambridge, MA/London: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Figueira, Dorothy Mathilda. 1991. Translating the Orient: The Reception of Sakuntala in 19th century Europe. Albany: SUNY Press.Google Scholar
Fischer-Tiné, Harald. 2009. Low and Licentious Europeans: Race, Class and ‘White Subalternity’ in Colonial India. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan.Google Scholar
Fisher, Michael H. 1996. The First Indian Author in English: Dean Mahomed (1759–1851) in India, Ireland and England. Delhi/Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Fiske, Adele and Emmerich, Christoph. 2004. ‘The Use of Buddhist Scriptures in Dr B.R. Ambedkar’s The Buddha and His Dhamma’ in Jhondale, Surendra and Beltz, Johannes (eds.), Reconstructing the World: B.R. Ambedkar and Buddhism in India. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 97119.Google Scholar
Foltz, Richard. 1996. ‘The Mughal Occupation of Balkh: 1646–1647’. Journal of Islamic Studies, 7/1:4961.Google Scholar
Forster, Edward Morgan. 1924. A Passage to India. London: Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Ulrike, Freitag and Clarence-Smith, William Gervase (eds.). 1997. Hadhrami Traders, Scholars and Statesmen in the Indian Ocean, 1750s–1950s. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Frey, Karsten. 2006. India’s Nuclear Bomb and National Security. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Fries, Yvonne and Bibin, Thomas. 1984. The Undesirables: The Expatriation of the Tamil People ‘of Recent Indian Origin’ from the Plantations in Sri Lanka to India. Calcutta: Bagchi.Google Scholar
Frith, Nicola. 2011. ‘French Counter-Narratives: Nationalisme, Patriotisme et Révolution’, in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 4362.Google Scholar
Frykenberg, Robert Eric (ed.). 2003. Christians and Missionaries in India: Cross-Cultural Communication since 1500 with Special Reference to Caste, Conversion and Colonialism. London: Routledge/Curzon.Google Scholar
Gadgil, Mahendra and Guha, Ramchandra. 1992. This Fissured Land: The Ecological History of India. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Galloway, J. H. 1989. The Sugar Cane Industry: An Historical Geography from Its Origins to 1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand. 1928. Satyagraha in South Africa. Ahmedabad: Navajivan.Google Scholar
Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand. 1959. The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, vol. III, 28 February 1898–1 October 1903. New Delhi: Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India.Google Scholar
Gardner, Nikolas. 2014. The Siege of Kutt-al-Amara: At War in Mesopotamia, 1915–1916. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Giraldez, Antonio. 2015. The Cargo of Trade: The Manila Galleons and the Dawn of the Global Economy. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Gittinger, Mattiebelle. 1982. Master Dyers to the World: Technique and Trade in Early Indian Dyed Cottons. Washington, DC: Textile Museum.Google Scholar
Glasson Deschaumes, Ghislaine and Ivekovic, Rada. 2003. Divided Countries, Separated Cities: The Modern Legacy of Partition. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Golani, Motti. 2019. ‘“The Meat and the Bones”: Recovering the Origins of the Partition of Mandate Palestine’ in Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura (eds.), Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press: 85108.Google Scholar
Gommans, Jos J. L. 1995. The Rise of the Indo-Afghan Empire, c.1710–1780. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Goodman, Grant Kohn. 2013. Japan and the Dutch 1600–1853. s.l. Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gopalan, A. K. s.d. In the Cause of the People: Reminiscences. Bombay/Calcutta/Madras/New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Govender, Ronnie. 1996. ‘1949’ in At the Edge and Other Cato Manor Stories. Pretoria: Manx: 107–17.Google Scholar
Graves, Robert. 1960 (1929). Goodbye to All That. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Greenberg, Michael. 1951. British Trade and the Opening of China, 1800–42. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Greenhut, Jeremy. 1983. ‘The Imperial Reserve: The Indian Corps on the Western Front, 1914–15’. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 12/1: 5473.Google Scholar
Greenough, Paul. 1982. Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal: The Bengal Famine 1943–44. New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Grierson, George A. 2011. ‘Diary of a Tour in the Bengal Presidency, 1883’ in Sarup, Leela Gujadhur (ed.), Facts about Indian Indentured Labour: Reports and Diaries of Major G.D. Pitcher and George A. Grierson. Calcutta: Aldrich International: 242332.Google Scholar
Griffiths, Percival Joseph. 1967. The History of the Indian Tea Industry. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.Google Scholar
Groseclose, Barbara S. 1995. British Sculpture and the Company Raj: Church Monuments and Public Statuary in Madras, Calcutta and Bombay to 1858. Newark: University of Delaware Press.Google Scholar
Guha, Ramachandra. 2013. Gandhi before India. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Guha, Ranajit. 1982. ‘On Some Aspects of the Historiography of Colonial India’ in Guha, Ranajit (ed.), Subaltern Studies I. Writings on South Asian History and Society. Delhi: Oxford University Press: 18.Google Scholar
Guha, Ranajit. 1987. Elementary Aspects of Peasant Insurgency in Colonial India. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Gupta, Suman. 2015. ‘On the Indian Readers of Hitler’s Mein Kampf’ in Consumable Texts in Contemporary India: Uncultured Books and Bibliographical Sociology. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan: 6179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Habib, Irfan. 1995. ‘Colonialization of the Indian Economy’ in Essays in Indian History: Towards a Marxist Perception. New Delhi: Tulika: 296335.Google Scholar
Hardwick, Louise. 2014. ‘Creolizing the Caribbean “Coolie”: A Biopolitical Reading of Indian Indenture Labourers and the Ethnoclass Hierarchy’. International Journal of Francophone Studies. 17/3–4: 397419.Google Scholar
Hartog, Rudolf. 2001. The Sign of the Tiger: Subhas Chandra Bose and His Indian Legion in Germany 1941–1945. New Delhi: Rupa & Co.Google Scholar
Hasan, Khalid (ed.). 2006. O City of Lights. Faiz Ahmed Faiz: Selected Poetry and Biographical Notes. Karachi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hasan, Mushirul (ed.). 2005. Westward Bound: Travels of Mirza Abu Taleb (trans. Charles Stewart). New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hatcher, Brian K. 1999. Eclecticism in Modern Hindu Discourse. New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hatcher, Brian K. (ed.). 2015. Hinduism in the Modern World. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hayes, Romain. 2011. Subhas Chandra Bose in Nazi Germany: Politics, Intelligence and Propaganda 1941–43. London: Hurst & Company.Google Scholar
Haynes, Douglas E. 2010. ‘Creating the Consumer? Advertising, Capitalism and the Middle Class in Urban Western India’ in Haynes, Douglas E., McGowan, Abigail, Roy, Tirthankar and Yanagisawa, Haruka (eds.), Towards a History of Consumption in South Asia. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 185223.Google Scholar
Hentley, J. S. 2004. ‘Chasing the Dragon: Accounting for the Under-Performance of India by Comparison with China in Attracting Foreign Direct Investment’. Journal of International Development, 16/7: 1039–52.Google Scholar
Hofmeyr, Isabel. 2011. ‘Gandhi’s Printing Press: Indian Ocean Print Culture and Cosmopolitanism’ in Hofmeyr, Isabel and Williams, Michelle (eds.), South Africa and India: Shaping the Global South. Johannesburg: Wits University Press: 2238.Google Scholar
Hossain, Hamida. 1988. The Company Weavers of Bengal: The East India Company and the Organization of Textile Production in Bengal 1750–1813. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Howard, Michael. 1991. Fiji: Race and Politics in an Island State. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.Google Scholar
Huntingford, G. W. B. (ed. and trans.). 2017. The Periplus of the Erythrean Sea, by an Unknown Author, with Some Extracts from Agatharkides, ‘On the Erythrean Sea’. London: Hakluyt Society.Google Scholar
Ikeya, Chio. 2017. ‘Transcultural Intimacies in Burma and the Straits Settlements. A History of Belonging, Difference and Empire’ in Laffan, Michael (ed.), Belonging across the Bay of Bengal: Religious Rites, Colonial Migrations, National Rights. London: Bloomsbury Academic: 113–38.Google Scholar
Ingram, Edward (ed.), 1970. Two Views of British India: The Private Correspondence of Mr Dundas and Lord Wellesley 1798–1801. Bath: Adam and Dart.Google Scholar
I’tesamuddin, Mirza Sheikh. 2002. The Wonders of Vilayet: Being the Memoir, Originally in Persian, of a Visit to Britain and France (trans. Kaiser Haq). Leeds: Peepul Tree.Google Scholar
Jackson, Isabella. 2012. ‘The Raj on Nanjing Road: Sikh Policemen in Treaty-Port Shanghai’. Modern Asian Studies, 46/6: 16721704.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, Roy. 2010. Maulana Mawdudi and Political Islam: Authority and the Islamic State. s.l. Routledge.Google Scholar
Jackson, Stanley. 1989. The Sassoons: Portrait of a Dynasty. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Jaffrelot, Christophe. 1996. The Hindu Nationalist Movement. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Jagan, Cheddi. 1966. The West on Trial: My Fight for Guyana’s Freedom. London: Michael Joseph.Google Scholar
Jaher, Frederic C. and Kling, Blair B. 2008. ‘Hollywood’s India: The Memory of RKO’s Gunga Din’. Film & History, 38/2: 3344.Google Scholar
Jain, Kajri. 2007. Gods in the Bazaar: The Economies of Indian Calendar Art. Durham, NC/London: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Jalais, Annu. 2014. Forest of Tigers: People, Politics and Environment in the Sunderbans. s.l. Routledge India.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jasanoff, Maya. 2006. Edge of Empire: Lives, Culture and Conquest in the East 1750–1850. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Jensen, Joan M. 1988. Passage from India: Asian Indian Immigrants in the United States. New Haven, CT/London: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Jhondale, Surendra and Beltz, Johannes (eds.). 2004. Reconstructing the World: B.R. Ambedkar and Buddhism in India. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Jindal, Anu. 2011. ‘Contemporary Art Currents between Japan and India’ in Takao, Uno (ed.), Changing Perceptions of Japan in South Asia in the New Asian Era: The State of Japanese Studies in India and Other SAARC Countries. Kyoto: International Research Centre for Japanese Studies: 205–19.Google Scholar
John, Stanley. 2013. ‘Malayali Diaspora in the Gulf: Temporary Economic Migration’ in George, Susan and Thomas, T. V. (eds.), Malayali Diaspora: From Kerala to the Ends of the World. New Delhi: Serials Publications: 4559.Google Scholar
Johnston, Hugh. 1984. East Indians in Canada. Ottawa: Canadian Historical Society.Google Scholar
Jonker, Gerdlen. 2016. The Ahmadiyya Quest for Religious Progress: Missionizing Europe 1900–1965. Leiden/Boston: Brill.Google Scholar
Joshi, Kiran. 1999. Documenting Chandigarh. Ahmedabad: Mapin Books.Google Scholar
Joshi, Vijay and Little, I. M. D. 1997. India’s Economic Reforms 1991–2001. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kämpchen, Martin and Bargha, Imre (eds.). 2014. Rabindranath Tagore: One Hundred Years of Global Reception. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan.Google Scholar
Kanapathipillai, Vilai. 2009. Citizenship and Statelessness in Sri Lanka: The Case of the Tamil Estate Workers. London: Anthem Press.Google Scholar
Kanigel, Robert. 1991. The Man Who Knew Infinity: A Life of the Genius Ramanujan. New York: Scribner; Toronto: Collier Macmillan Canada; New York: Maxwell Macmillan International.Google Scholar
Karatchkova, Elena. 2013. ‘The Russian Factor in the Indian Mutiny’ in Bates, Crispin and Carter, Marina (eds.), Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857. Vol. 3: Global Perspectives: Los Angeles/New Delhi: Sage: 120–33.Google Scholar
Karyekar, Madhuvanti. 2014. ‘Fostering Aesthetic Tolerance through Literary Translation: Georg Forster’s Sakuntala’ in Cho, Joanne Miyang, Kurlander, Eric and McGetchin, Douglas T. (eds.), Transnational Encounters between Germany and India: Kindred Spirits in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Oxford/New York: Routledge: 1324.Google Scholar
Katoch, Hemant Singh and Dennis, Peter. 2018. Imphal 1944: The Japanese Invasion of India. London: Osprey Publishing.Google Scholar
Kaul, Chandrika. 2013. ‘“You Cannot Govern by Force Alone”: W.H. Russell, The Times and the Great Rebellion’ in Bates, Crispin and Carter, Marina (eds.), Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857. Vol. 3: Global Perspectives: Los Angeles/New Delhi: Sage: 1835.Google Scholar
Kaunda, Kenneth D. 1962. Zambia Shall Be Free: An Autobiography. London: Heinemann Educational Books.Google Scholar
Keddie, Nikki R. (ed. and trans.). 1968. An Islamic Response to Imperialism: Political and Religious Writings of Jamal-al-Din-al-Afghani Including a Translation of the Refutation of the Materialists from the Original Persian. Berkeley/Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Kejariwal, O. P. 1988. The Asiatic Society of Bengal and the Discovery of India’s Past 1784–1838. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kelly, John Dunham and Singh, Uttra Kumari (ed. and trans.). 2003. My Twenty-One Years in the Fiji Islands; and the Story of the Haunted Line, by Totaram Sanadhaya. Suva: Fiji Museum.Google Scholar
Khan, Noor-Aiman I. 2011. Egyptian-Indian Nationalist Collaboration and the British Empire. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Khan, Yasmin. 2015. The Raj at War: A People’s History of India’s Second World War. London: The Bodley Head.Google Scholar
Khanna, T. and Yafeh, Y. 2007. ‘Business Groups in Emerging Markets: Paragons or Parasites’. Journal of Economic Literature, 45/2: 331–72.Google Scholar
Khin, Yi. 1988. The Dobama Movement in Burma (1930–1938). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Khoo, Boo Teik. 1993 (reprint 2006). ‘Malay Attitudes towards Indians’ in Mani, A. K. and Sandhu, K. S. (eds.), Indian Communities in Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies: 266–87.Google Scholar
Khullar, Sonal. 2015. Worldly Affiliations: Artistic Practice, National Identity, and Modernism in India, 1930–1990. Oakland: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Kilchenmann, Johann Eduard. 1911. Schweizer-söldner im Dienste der english-Ostindische Kompanie um die Mitte des 18 Jahrhunderts. Ein Betrag zur Geschichte der englischen Untersuchungen in Vorderindien. Grüninger: Buchdrückerei J. Wirz.Google Scholar
Kimani, Peter. 2017. The Dance of the Jakaranda. New York: Akashic Books.Google Scholar
Kirk-Greene, A. H. M. 1971. Crisis and Conflict in Nigeria: A Documentary Sourcebook 1966–1969, Vol. I. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kluwick, Ursula. 2011. Exploring Magic Realism in Salman Rushdie’s Fiction. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Kolff, Dirk H. A. 1990. Naukar, Rajput and Sepoy: The Ethnohistory of the Military Labour Market in Hindustan, 1450–1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kopf, David. 1979. The Brahmo Samaj and the Shaping of the Modern Indian Mind. Princeton/Guilford: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Kosambi, Meera (ed. and trans.). 2003. Pandita Ramabai’s American Encounter: The Peoples of the United States. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press.Google Scholar
Kotaiah, B. 1999. A Handbook of Western Arts in the Salar Jung Museum. Hyderabad: Salar Jung Museum Board.Google Scholar
Kulke, Hermann. 2009. ‘The Naval Expeditions of the Cholas in the Context of Asian History’ in Kulke, Hermann, Kesavapany, K. and Sakhuja, Vijay (eds.), Nagapattinam to Suvarnadwipa: Reflections on Chola Naval Expeditions to Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies: 119.Google Scholar
Lafont, Jean-Marie. 2001. Maharaja Ranjit Singh: The French Connections. Amritsar: Guru Nanak Dev University.Google Scholar
Lago, Mary L. (ed.). 1972. Imperfect Encounter: Letters of William Rothenstein and Rabindranath Tagore 1911–1914. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala (ed.). 2014. The Coal Nation: History, Ecology and Politics of Coal in India. Farnham: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Lal, Brij V. 2001. Mr Tulsi’s Store: A Fijian Journey. Canberra: Pandanus Books.Google Scholar
Lal, Brij V. 2013. ‘Indian Indenture: Experiment and Experience’ in Chatterjee, Joya and Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora. Abingdon/New York: Routledge: 7995.Google Scholar
Lal, Mohan. 1846. Travels in the Panjab, Afghanistan and Turkestan to Balkh, Bokhara and Herat. London: W.H. Allen & Co.Google Scholar
Lanza del Vasto, Joseph Jean. 1943. Pèlerinage aux sources. Paris: Denoël.Google Scholar
Larkin, Brian. 2005. ‘Bendiri Music, Globalisation and Urban Experience in Nigeria’ in Kaur, Ravinder and Sinha, Ajay J. (eds.), Bollyworld: Popular Indian Cinema through a Transnational Lens. New Delhi/Thousand Oaks, CA/London: Sage: 284308.Google Scholar
Lebra-Chapman, Joyce. 2008. The Indian National Army and Japan. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Lemire, Beverley. 1991. Fashion’s Favourite: The Cotton Trade and the Consumer in Britain, 1660–1800. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Leonard, Karen Isaksen. 1992. Making Ethnic Choices: California’s Punjabi Mexican Americans. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Lesser, Jeffrey. 2013. Immigration, Ethnicity and National Identity in Brazil, 1808 to the Present. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Levi, Scott. 2002a. ‘Hindus beyond the Hindu Kush: Indians in the Central Asian Slave Trade’. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 3rd ser., 12/3: 277–88.Google Scholar
Levi, Scott. 2002b. The Indian Diaspora in Central Asia and Its Trade, 1550–1900. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Lewis, Geoffrey. 1975. ‘The Ottoman Proclamation of Jihad in 1914’. Islamic Quarterly, 19: 157–63.Google Scholar
Liebig, Michael and Mishra, Saurabh. 2017. The Arthashastra in a Transcultural Perspective: Comparing Kautilya with Sun-Zi, Nizam-ul-Mulk, Barani and Machiavelli. New Delhi: Pentagon Press.Google Scholar
Lieng, Jennifer. 2007. ‘Migration Patterns and Occupational Specialisation of Kolkata Chinese: An Insider’s History’. China Report, 43/4: 397410.Google Scholar
Lloyd, David. 1996. ‘Discussion outside History: Irish New Histories and “The Subalternity Effect”’ in Amin, Shahid and Chakrabarty, Dipesh (eds.), Subaltern Studies IX: Writings on South Asian History and Society. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 261–77.Google Scholar
Long, Roger D. and Talbot, Ian. 2018. India and World War I: A Centennial Assessment. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Machado, Everton V. 2011. ‘The Rebellion in a 19th Century Indo-Portuguese Novel’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 251–68.Google Scholar
Machado, Pedro. 2004. ‘A Forgotten Corner of the Indian Ocean: Gujarati Merchants, Portuguese India and the Mozambique Slave Trade c. 1730–1830’ in Campbell, Gwynn (ed.), The Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. London: Frank Cass: 1732.Google Scholar
Machado, Pedro. 2014. Ocean of Trade: South Asian Merchants, Africa and the Indian Ocean, c. 1750–1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
MacMunn, George F. 1911. The Martial Races of India. London: Sampson, Low, Marston & Co.Google Scholar
Mahabir, Noor Kumar. 1985. The Still Cry: Personal Accounts of East Indians in Trinidad and Tobago during Indentureship (1845–1917). Tacarigua, Trinidad/Ithaca, NY: Calaloux Publications.Google Scholar
Mahabir, Noorkumar and Maharaj, Ashin. 1989. ‘Hindu Elements in the Shango/Orisha Cult of Trinidad’ in Birbalsingh, Frank (ed.), Indenture and Exile: The Indo-Caribbean Experience. Toronto: TSAR: 191201.Google Scholar
Majeed, Javed. 2012. ‘Literary Modernity in South Asia’ in Peers, Douglas M. and Gooptu, Nandini (eds.), India and the British Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 262–83.Google Scholar
Mallick, Ross. 1994. Indian Communism: Opposition, Collaboration and Institutionalization. Oxford/Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Manjapra, Kris. 2010. M.N.Roy: Marxism and Colonial Cosmopolitanism. Delhi: Routledge India.Google Scholar
Manoa, Pio. 1979. ‘Across the Fence’ in Subramani, (ed.), The Indo-Fijian Experience. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press: 184207.Google Scholar
Mansergh, Nicholas. 1978. The Prelude to Partition: Concepts and Aims in Ireland and India. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Markovits, Claude. 2000. The Global Worlds of Indian Merchants c.1750–1950: Traders of Sind from Bukhara to Panama. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Markovits, Claude. 2010. ‘Indian Soldiers’ Experiences in France during World War I: Seeing Europe from the Rear of the Front’ in Liebau, Heike et al. (eds.), The World in World Wars: Experiences, Perceptions and Perspectives from Africa and Asia. Leiden/Boston: Brill: 2753.Google Scholar
Markovits, Claude. 2017. ‘Turning Mazzini on His Head: Gandhi’s Polemics against Savarkar in Hind Swaraj in Leucci, Tiziana, Markovits, Claude and Fourcade, Marie (eds.), L’Inde et l’Italie: Rencontres intellectuelles, politiques et artistiques. Paris: Editions de l’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, collection Purusartha: 187–98.Google Scholar
Markovits, Rahul. (forthcoming). ‘Ahmad Khan’, Encyclopaedia of Islam 3.Google Scholar
Marsden, Magnus. 2013. ‘Out of India: Deobandi Islam, Radicalism and the Globalisation of “South Asian Islam”’ in Chatterjee, Joya and Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora. London/New York: Routledge: 211–22.Google Scholar
Marshall, Peter John. 1990. ‘The Whites of British India 1780–1830: A Failed Colonial Society’. The International History Review, XII/1: 2644.Google Scholar
Marston, Daniel. 2014. The Indian Army and the End of the Raj. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich. 1959. The First Indian War of Independence 1857–1859. Moscow: Progress Publishers.Google Scholar
Masuzawa, Tomoko. 2005. The Invention of World Religion, or How European Universalism Was Preserved in the Language of Pluralism. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.). 2011. Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge.Google Scholar
Mbeki, Linda and van Rossum, Matthias. 2017. ‘Private Slave Trade in the Dutch Indian Ocean World: A Study into the Networks and Backgrounds of the Slavers and the Enslaved in South Asia and South Africa’. Slavery and Abolition, 38/1: 95116.Google Scholar
McCabe, Jane. 2017. Race, Tea and Colonial Resettlement: Imperial Families, Interrupted. London/New York: Bloomsbury Academic.Google Scholar
McGarr, Paul M. 2015. ‘The Viceroys Are Disappearing from the Roundabouts in Delhi: British Symbols of Power in Post-Colonial India’. Modern Asian Studies, 49/3: 787831.Google Scholar
McGregor, R. S. 1974. Hindi Literature of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Wiesbaden: Otto Harassowitz.Google Scholar
McMillan, Richard. 2005. The British Occupation of Indonesia 1945–1946: Britain, the Netherlands and the Indonesian Revolution. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
McPherson, Kenneth. 1990. ‘Chulias and Klings: Indigenous Trade Diasporas and European Penetration of the Indian Ocean Littoral’ in Borsa, Giorgio (ed.), Trade and Politics in the Indian Ocean: History and Contemporary Perspectives. New Delhi: Manohar: 3346.Google Scholar
Mehta, S. D. 1954. The Cotton Mills of India 1854–1954. Bombay: Textile Association (India).Google Scholar
Menon, Sridevi. 2016. ‘Narrating Brunei: Travelling Histories of Brunei Indians’. Modern Asian Studies, 50/2: 718–64.Google Scholar
Meshtrie, Rajend, Kulkarni-Joshi, Sonal and Paradkar, Ruta. 2017. ‘Kokni in Capetown and the Sociolinguistics of Transnationalism’. Language Matters, 48/3: 3397.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Barbara Daly. 1982. Islam Revived in British India: Deoband, 1860–1900. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Thomas R. 1989. An Imperial Vision: India’s Architecture and Britain’s Raj. Berkeley/Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Thomas R. 2007a. Imperial Connections: India in the Indian Ocean Arena 1860–1920. Berkeley/Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Metcalf, Thomas. R. 2007b. ‘Projecting Power: The Indian Army Overseas’ in Imperial Connections: India in the Indian Ocean Arena 1860–1920. Delhi: Oxford University Press: 68101.Google Scholar
Meyer, Eric. 2003. ‘Labour Circulation between Sri Lanka and South India in Historical Perspective’ in Markovits, Claude, Pouchepadass, Jacques and Subrahmanyam, Sanjay (eds.), Society and Circulation: Mobile People and Itinerant Cultures in South Asia 1750–1950. New Delhi: Permanent Black: 5588.Google Scholar
Mill, James. 1817. The History of British India. London: Baldwin, Cradock & Joy.Google Scholar
Minault, Gail. 1982. The Khilafat Movement: Religious Symbolism and Political Mobilization in India. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mishra, Sauresh. 2011. Pilgrimage, Politics and Pestilence: The Haj from the Indian Subcontinent 1860–1920. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mishra, Vijay. 2007. Literature of the Indian Diaspora: Theorizing the Diasporic Imaginary. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Mitra, Dinabhandu. 1861. Nil Darpan (The Indigo Planting Mirror); A Play … Translated from Bengali into English by a Native. Calcutta: C.H. Manuel.Google Scholar
Mitter, Partha. 1990. ‘Artistic Responses to Colonialism in India: An Overview’ in Bayly, C. A. (ed.), India and the British 1600–1947. s.l. National Portrait Gallery: 361–7.Google Scholar
Moran, Dominic (ed. and commentator). 2009. Pablo Neruda, Veinte poemas de amor y una cancion desesperada. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Morgan, E. D. (ed.). 1886. Early Voyages and Travels to Russia and Persia by A. Jenkinson and Other Englishmen: With an Account of the First Intercourse of the English with Russia and Central Asia by Way of the Caspian Sea. London: Hakluyt Society.Google Scholar
Morris, Morris D. 1983. ‘The Growth of Large-Scale Industry to 1947’ in Kumar, Dharma (ed.), The Cambridge Economic History of India. Vol. II: c.1757–c.1970. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 553676.Google Scholar
Morris, R. J. 2013. ‘Bowld Irish Sepoy’ in Bates, Crispin and Carter, Marina (eds.), Mutiny at the Margins: New Perspectives on the Indian Uprising of 1857. Vol. 3: Global Perspectives: Los Angeles/New Delhi: Sage: 98119.Google Scholar
Morton-Jack, George. 2014. The Indian Army on the Western Front: India’s Expeditionary Force to France and Belgium during the First World War. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mosca, Matthew W. 2013. From Frontier Policy to Foreign Policy: The Question of India and the Transformation of Geopolitics in Qing China. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Mulford, David Campbell. 1967. Zambia: The Politics of Independence, 1957–1964. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Murthy, C. S. R. 2007. ‘Unintended Consequences of Peace Operations for Troop-Contributing Countries from South Asia’ in Aoi, Chiyuli, Cedric de Coning and Thakur, Ramesh (eds.), Unintended Consequences of Peacekeeping Operations. Tokyo: United Nations University Press: 156–70.Google Scholar
Nadri, Ghulam H. 2015. ‘Sailors, Zielverkopers and the Dutch East India Company: The Maritime Labour Market in Eighteenth Century Surat’. Modern Asian Studies, 49/2: 336–64.Google Scholar
Naidu, Vijay. 2004. ‘Searching’ in Lal, Brij V. (ed.), Bittersweet: The Indo-Fijian Experience. Canberra: Pandanus Books: 373–86.Google Scholar
Naipaul, V. S. 1961. A House for Mr Biswas. London: André Deutsch.Google Scholar
Nakahara, Michiko. 2005. ‘Malayan Labour on the Thailand-Burma Railway’ in Kratoska, P. H. (ed.). Asian Labor in the Wartime Japanese Empire: Unknown Histories. New York: Armak: 247–62.Google Scholar
Nakajima, Takashi. 2009. Bose of Nakamuraya: An Indian Revolutionary in Japan (trans. from Japanese). New Delhi: Promilla & Co.Google Scholar
Nandy, Ashis. 1995. Alternative Sciences: Authenticity and Creativity in Two Indian Scientists. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Nandy, Ashis, Trivedy, Shikha, Mayaram, Shail and Yagnik, Achyut. 1997. Creating a Nationality: The Ramjanmabhumi Movement and Fear of the Self. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Naoroji, Dadabhai. 1901. Poverty and Un-British Rule in India. London: Swan Sonenschein.Google Scholar
Neruda, Pablo. 1969. Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair (trans. W. S. Merwin). London: Jonathan Cape.Google Scholar
Neruda, Pablo. 1997. Spain in the Heart: Hymn to the Glories of the People at War (1936–37) (trans. Richard Schaaf). New York: Azul Publications.Google Scholar
Noorani, A. G. 2002. Savarkar and Hindutva: The Godse Connection. New Delhi: Leftword Books.Google Scholar
Norris, James Alfred. 1967. The First Afghan War 1838–1842. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Oesterheld, Joachim. 2014. ‘Germans in India between Kaiserreich and the End of World War II’ in Cho, Joanne Miyang, Kurlander, Eric and McGetchin, Douglas T. (eds.), Transnational Encounters between Germany and India: Kindred Spirits in the 19th and 20th Centuries. Oxford/New York: Routledge: 101–14.Google Scholar
Okakura, Kakuzo. 1904. The Ideals of the East: With Special Reference to the Art of Japan. London: John Murray.Google Scholar
Olstein, Diego Adrian. 2014. Thinking History Globally. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
O’Malley, Kate. 2019. ‘Indian “Ulsterisation”, Ireland, India and Partition: The Infection of Example?’ in Dubnov, Arie M. and Robson, Laura (eds.), Partition: A Transnational History of Twentieth-Century Territorial Separatism. Stanford: Stanford University Press: 111–27.Google Scholar
Omissi, David. 1994. The Sepoy and the Raj: The Indian Army 1860–1940. Basingstoke/London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Omissi, David (ed.). 1999. Indian Voices of the Great War: Soldiers’ Letters, 1914–18. Basingstoke/London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Osterhammel, Jürgen. 2014. The Transformation of the World: A Global History of the Nineteenth Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
O’Sullivan, Michael. 2018. ‘Pan-Islamic Bonds and Interest: Ottoman Bonds, Red Crescent Remittances and the Limits of Indian Muslim Capital, 1877–1924’. Indian Economic and Social History Review, 55/2: 183220.Google Scholar
Oxenford, John (trans.). 1984. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Conversations with Eckermann (1823–1832). San Francisco: North Point Press.Google Scholar
Palau de Nemes, Graciela. 1961. ‘Tagore and Jimenez, a Poetic Coincidence’ in Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli (ed.), Rabindranath Tagore 1861–1961 (A Centenary). New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi: 187–97.Google Scholar
Palmer, Colin A. 2010. Cheddi Jagan and the Politics of Power: British Guiana’s Struggle for Independence. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Pandian, Anand and Mariappan, M. P. 2014. Ayya’s Accounts: A Ledger of Hope in Modern India. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press.Google Scholar
Panteli, Stavros. 2000. A History of Cyprus: From Foreign Domination to Troubled Independence. London: East-West.Google Scholar
Paremmakkal, Cathanar Thomman. 1971. The Varthamanapusthakam: An Account of the History of the Malabar Church between the Years 1773 and 1786 … and the Journey from Malabar to Rome via Lisbon and Back, trans. Placid J. Podipara. Rome: Pont: Institutum Orientalium Studiorum.Google Scholar
Parthasarathi, Prasannan. 2001. The Transition to a Colonial Economy: Weavers, Merchants and Kings in South India 1720–1800. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Partridge, Christopher. 2013. ‘Lost Horizon: H.P. Blavatsky and Theosophical Orientalism’ in Hammer, Olav and Rothenstein, Mikael (eds.), Handbook of the Theosophical Current. Leiden/Boston: Brill: 309–33.Google Scholar
Patel, Zarina. 2006. Unquiet: The Life and Times of Makhan Singh. Nairobi: Zand Graphics.Google Scholar
Patterson, J. Brunlees (‘Wanderer’). 1885? Life in the Ranks of the British Army in India and on Board a Troopship. London: John & Robert Maxwell.Google Scholar
Pennington, Brian K. 2005. Was Hinduism Invented? Britons, Indians and the Colonial Constitution of Religion. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Pepys, Samuel. 2003. The Diary of Samuel Pepys: A Selection. London: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Pétriat, Philippe. 2016. Le Négoce des Lieux Saints: Négociants Hadramis de Djedda, 1850–1950. Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne.Google Scholar
Platt, Stephen R. 2012. Autumn in the Heavenly Kingdom: China, the West, and the Epic Story of the Taiping Civil War. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.Google Scholar
Pollock, Sheldon. 2006. The Language of Gods in the World of Men: Sanskrit, Culture and Power in Pre-modern South Asia. Berkeley/Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Powell, Avril Ann. 1993. Muslims and Missionaries in Pre-mutiny India. Richmond: Curzon.Google Scholar
Pradhan, Satyendra Dev. 1991. Indian Army in East Africa 1914–1918. New Delhi: National Book Organisation.Google Scholar
Prakash, Om. 1985. The Dutch East India Company and the Trade of Bengal. Princeton/London: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Prakash, Om. 2004. Bullion for Goods: European and Asian Merchants in the Indian Ocean Trade 1500–1800. New Delhi: Manohar.Google Scholar
Puliurumpil, James Abraham. 2013. History of the Syro-Malabar Church. Kottayam: Oriental Institute of Religious Studies.Google Scholar
Radice, William. 2017. ‘Gitanjali Reborn, One Hundred Years Later: The Story of a Discovery’ in Martin, Kämpchen (ed.), Gitanjali Reborn: William Radice’s Writings on Rabindranath Tagore. New Delhi: Social Science Press: 3870.Google Scholar
Raj, Kapil. 2006. ‘Defusing Diffusionism: The Institutionalization of Modern Science Education in Early Nineteenth Century Bengal’ in Relocating Modern Science: Circulation and the Construction of Scientific Knowledge in South Asia and Europe, Seventeenth to Nineteenth Centuries. New Delhi: Permanent Black: 159–80.Google Scholar
Rajadhyaksha, Ashish. 2008. ‘The “Bollywoodization” of the Indian Cinema: Cultural Nationalism in a Global Arena’ in Kavoori, Anandam P. and Punathambekar, Aswim (eds.), Global Bollywood. New York/London: New York University Press: 1740.Google Scholar
Rajadhyaksha, Ashish. 2016. Indian Cinema: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rajagopalan, Sudha. 2008. Indian Films in Soviet Cinemas: The Culture of Movie-Going after Stalin. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press.Google Scholar
Rai, Rajesh. 2013. ‘The 1857 Panic and the Fabrication of an Indian “Menace” in Singapore’. Modern Asian Studies, 47/2: 365405.Google Scholar
Ramnath, Maia. 2011. Haj to Utopia: How the Ghadar Movement Charted Global Radicalism and Attempted to Overthrow the British Empire. Berkeley/Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Rangarajan, Mahesh and Sivaramakrishnan, K. 2014. Shifting Ground: People, Animals and Mobility in India’s Environmental History. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ray, Rabindra. 2002. The Naxalites and Their Ideology. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ray, Rajat Kanta. 1995. ‘Asian Capital in the Age of European Domination: The Rise of the Bazaar, 1800–1914’. Modern Asian Studies, 29/3: 449554.Google Scholar
Ray, Rajat Kanta. 2004. ‘Race, Religion and Realm: The Political Theory of “The Reigning Indian Crusade” 1857’ in Hasan, Mushirul and Gupta, Narayani, India’s Colonial Encounter: Essays in Memory of Eric Stokes. New Delhi: Manohar: 205–54.Google Scholar
Raychaudhuri, Tapan. 1988. Europe Reconsidered: Perceptions of the West in Nineteenth Century Bengal. Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Reichel, Claudia. 2011. ‘German Responses: Theodor Fontane, Edgar Bauer, Wilhelm Liebknecht’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 1941.Google Scholar
Richards, John F. 1981. ‘The Indian Empire and Peasant Production of Opium in the Nineteenth Century’. Modern Asian Studies, 15/1: 5982.Google Scholar
Riello, Giorgio. 2009. ‘The India Apprenticeship: The Trade of Indian Textiles and the Making of European Cotton’ in Riello, Giorgio and Roy, Tirthankar (eds.), How India Clothed the World: The World of South Asian Textiles 1500–1850. Leiden/Boston: Brill: 309–46.Google Scholar
Rolland, Romain. 1924. Mahatma Gandhi. Paris: Stock.Google Scholar
Roy, Tirthankar. 1999. Traditional Industry in the Economy of Colonial India. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Roy, Tirthankar. 2010. Company of Kinsmen: Enterprise and Community in South Asian History 1700–1940. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Roy, Tirthankar and Haynes, Douglas. 2013. ‘Mobile Artisans’ in Chatterji, Joya and Washbrook, David (eds.), Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora. London/New York: Routledge: 4352.Google Scholar
Rudner, D. W. 1994. Caste and Capitalism in Colonial India: The Nattukottai Chettiars. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Rush, Dana. 1999. ‘Eternal Potential: Chromolithographs in Vodunland’. African Arts, 33/4: 6075.Google Scholar
Rushdie, Salman and West, Elizabeth (eds.). 1997. Mirrorwork: Fifty Years of Indian Writing 1947–1997. London: Henry Holt.Google Scholar
Rutledge, Ian. 2014. Enemy on the Euphrates: The British Occupation of Iraq and the Great Arab Revolt 1914–1921. London: Saqi.Google Scholar
Rye, Ajit Singh. 1993. ‘The Indian Community in the Philippines’ in Mani, A. K. and Sandhu, K. S. (eds.), Indian Communities in Southeast Asia. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies: 708–74.Google Scholar
Said, Edward W. 1978. Orientalism. London/Henley: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Samaroo, Brinsley. 1974. ‘Politics and Afro-Indian Relations in Trinidad’ in La Guerre, John (ed.), Calcutta to Caroni: The East Indians of Trinidad. London: Longman: 8497.Google Scholar
Sarkar, Jadunath. 2017. Shivaji and His Times. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan.Google Scholar
Sartori, Andrew. 2017. ‘C.A. Bayly and the Question of Indian Political Thought’. Modern Asian Studies, 51/3: 867–77.Google Scholar
Saruski, Jaime. 1989. ‘The East Indian Community in Cuba’ in Birbalsingh, Frank (ed.), Indenture and Exile: The Indo-Caribbean Experience. Toronto: TSAR: 73–8.Google Scholar
Savarkar, Vinayak Damodar. 1909? The Indian War of Independence, by an Indian Nationalist. s.l.Google Scholar
Savarkar, Vinayak Damodar. 1923. Hindutva: Who Is a Hindu? Poona: S.P. Gokhale.Google Scholar
Schlegel, Carl Wilhelm Friedrich von. 2001. On the Wisdom and Language of the Indians (trans. from German). London: Ganesa Publications.Google Scholar
Schwartz, R. P. 1956. ‘French Documents on Indian Cotton Painting (I): The Beaulieu Ms, c. 1734’. Journal of Indian Textile History, II: 523.Google Scholar
Scott, Paul. 1977. Staying On. Bombay: Allied Publishers.Google Scholar
Seager, Richard Hughes. 1995. The World’s Parliament of Religions: The East/West Encounter, Chicago, 1893. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Seager, Richard Hughes. 2006. Encountering the Dharma: Daisuku Ikeda, Soka Gakkai, and the Globalization of Buddhist Humanism. Berkeley/Los Angeles/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Sen, Keshub Chandra. 1888. Diary in Ceylon, from 27th September to 5th November 1859. Calcutta: Brahmo Trust Society.Google Scholar
Sen, Simonti. 2005. Travels to Europe: Self and Other in Bengali Travel Narratives 1870–1910. New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Sen, Simonti. 2010. ‘Rabindranath Tagore and Hariprabha Takeda: Two Tales of Japan’ in Mandal, Somdatta (ed.), Indian Travel Narratives. Jaipur: Rawat Publications: 90114.Google Scholar
Sen, Surendra Nath. 1957. Eighteen Fifty Seven. New Delhi: Government of India Publications.Google Scholar
Sengupta, Parna. 2011. Pedagogy for Religion: Missionary Education and the Fashioning of Hindus and Muslims in Bengal. Berkeley/London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Seth, Merop Jacob. 1937. Armenians in India from the Early Times to the Present Day. Calcutta: Self-Published.Google Scholar
Shah, Alpa and Pettigrew, Joyce. 2009. ‘Windows into a Revolution: Ethnographies of Maoism in South Asia’. Introduction to special collected edition of Dialectical Anthropology, 33–4: 225–51.Google Scholar
Sharma, Rekha and Annamalai, E. (eds.). 2003. Indian Diaspora in Search of Identity. Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.Google Scholar
Shlomowitz, Ralph and McDonald, John. 1990. ‘Mortality of Indian Labour on Ocean Voyages 1843–1917’. Studies in History, 6/1: 3565.Google Scholar
Sikand, Yoginder. 2002. The Origins and Development of the Tablighi Jama’at (1920–2000): A Cross-Country Comparative Study. New Delhi: Orient Longman.Google Scholar
Simmons, Adele Smith. 1982. Modern Mauritius: The Politics of Decolonization. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Singh, Harkarat. 2007. Intervention in Sri Lanka: The IPKF Experience Retold. New Delhi: Manohar.Google Scholar
Sinha-Kerkhoff, Kathinka, Bal, Ellen and Deo Singh, Alok (eds. and trans.). 2005. ‘Jeevan Prakash’: Autobiography of an Indian Indentured Labourer, Munshi Rahman Khan (1874–1972). Delhi: Shipra.Google Scholar
Spear, Richard E. 2008. ‘Colonial Collectors: The Tata Bequests of Nineteenth Century European Paintings in the Mumbai Museum’. The Burlington Magazine, 150/1: 1527.Google Scholar
Speckman, Johan D. 1965. Marriage and Kinship among Indians in Surinam. Assen: Van Gorcum.Google Scholar
Stanley, Peter. 2002. ‘“Great in Adversity”: Indian Prisoners of War in New Guinea’. Journal of the Australian War Memorial, 37.Google Scholar
Steene, Gwanda Vander. 2008. ‘“Hindu” Dance Groups and Indophilia in Senegal: The Imagination of the Exotic Other’ in Hawley, John C. (ed.), India in Africa, Africa in India: Indian Ocean Cosmopolitanisms. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press: 117–47.Google Scholar
Stern, Philip J. 2011. The Company State: Corporate Sovereignty and the Early Modern Foundations of the British Empire in India. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Stokes, Eric (ed. Bayly, C. A. ). 1986. The Peasant Armed: The Indian Rebellion of 1857. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Streets, Heather. 2004. Martial Races: The Military, Race and Masculinity in British Imperial Culture, 1857–1914. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay. 1997. The Career and Legend of Vasco de Gama. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay. 2001. ‘Introduction: The Indian Ocean World and Ashin Das Gupta’ in The Worlds of the Indian Ocean 1500–1800: Collected Writings of Ashin Das Gupta, Compiled by Uma Das Gupta. New Delhi: Oxford University Press: 14.Google Scholar
Subrahmanyam, Sanjay. 2005. Explorations in Connected History. Mughals and Franks: From the Tagus to the Ganges, 2 vols. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Swanepoel, Christiaan. 2012. ‘Writing and Publishing in African Languages since 1948’ in Attwell, David and Attridge, Derek (eds.), The Cambridge History of South African Literature. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press: 607–32.Google Scholar
Tan, Chung and Wei, Liming. 2014. ‘China’ in Kämpchen, Martin and Bargha, Imre (eds.), Rabindranath Tagore: One Hundred Years of Global Reception. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan: 3856.Google Scholar
Tandan, Banmali. 2001. The Architecture of Lucknow and Its Dependencies 1722–1856: A Descriptive Inventory and an Analysis of Nawabi Types. New Delhi: Vikas.Google Scholar
Takahashi, Yuri. 2012. ‘The Case-Book of Mr San Shar: Burmese Society and Nationalist Thought in the 1930s as Seen in the Burmese Sherlock Holmes Stories’, artsonline.monash.edu.au/mai/files/2012/07/yuritakahashi.pdf.Google Scholar
Thakurdas, Purshottamdas et al. 1944–5. A Plan of Economic Development for India. Bombay: Commercial Printing Press.Google Scholar
Thampi, Madhavi. 2005. Indians in China 1800–1949. New Delhi: Manohar.Google Scholar
Thapar, Romilla. 2010. Sakuntala: Texts, Readings, Histories. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Thiara, Ravi K. 1999. ‘The African-Indian Antithesis? The 1949 Durban “Riots” in South Africa’ in Brah, Avtar, Hickman, Mary J. and Ghaill, Martin Mac An (eds.), Thinking Identities: Ethnicity, Racism and Culture. Basingstoke: Macmillan: 161–84.Google Scholar
Thoreau, Henry David. c.1997. Walden, with an Introduction and Annotations by Bill McKibben. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Timberg, Thomas A. 1978. The Marwaris: From Traders to Industrialists. Delhi: Vikas.Google Scholar
Tinker, Hugh. 1974. A New System of Slavery: The Export of Indian Labour Overseas 1830–1920. London/Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Tracy, Nicholas. 1995. Manila Ransomed: The British Assault on Manila in the Seven Years War. Exeter: University of Exeter Press.Google Scholar
Travilian, Taylor (ed.). 2015. Pliny the Elder, The Natural History, Book VII. London: Bloomsbury Academic.Google Scholar
Tsui, Brian. 2015. ‘Decolonization and Revolution: Debating Gandhism in Republican China’. Modern China, 41/1: 5989.Google Scholar
Tumbe, Chinmay. 2017. ‘Transnational Indian Business in the Twentieth Century’. Business History Review, 91/4: 651–79.Google Scholar
Twaddle, Michael (ed.). 1975. Expulsion of a Minority: Essays on Ugandan Asians. London: Athlone Press.Google Scholar
Tzoref-Ashkenazi, Chen. 2015. German Soldiers in Colonial India. London: Pickering & Chatto.Google Scholar
Vaid, Kanwal Narain. 1972. The Indian Overseas Community in Hong Kong. University of Hong Kong.Google Scholar
Vanden Eynde, Oliver. 2015. ‘Military Service and Human Capital Accumulation: Evidence from Colonial Punjab’, www.parisschoolofeconomics.eu/docs/vanden-eynde-oliver/military-service-colonial-pujab-pdf.Google Scholar
Van der Linden, Marcel (ed.). 2011. Humanitarian Intervention and Changing Labor Relations: The Long-Term Consequences of the Abolition of the Slave Trade. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Venkataraman, Vijaya. 2011. ‘El dragon del fuego: A Dramatic Representation of the Revolt’ in Mazumdar, Shaswati (ed.), Insurgent Sepoys: Europe Views the Revolt of 1857. London/New York/New Delhi: Routledge: 278–88.Google Scholar
Versluis, Arthur. 1993. American Transcendentalism and Asian Religions. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Visram, Rozina. 2002. Asians in Britain: 400 Years of History. London: Pluto Press.Google Scholar
Vivekananda, Swami. 1909. East and West. Madras: Brahmavadin Office.Google Scholar
Wallace, R. D. 1928. The Romance of Jute: A Short History of the Calcutta Jute Mill Industry, 1855–1927. London: W. Thacker & Co.Google Scholar
Washbrook, David. 2012. ‘The Indian Economy and the British Empire’ in Peers, Douglas M. and Gooptu, Nandini (eds.), India and the British Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 4474.Google Scholar
Webb, Maurice and Kirkwood, Kenneth. 1949. The Durban Riots and After. Johannesburg: Institute of Race Relations.Google Scholar
Weber, Max. 1958. The Religion of India: The Sociology of Hinduism and Buddhism (ed. and trans. Hans Gerth and Don Martindale). Glencoe, IL: Free Press.Google Scholar
Weber, Thomas. 1988. Hugging the Trees: The Story of the Chipko Movement. Delhi: Viking India.Google Scholar
Wickramasinghe, Nira. 2006. Sri Lanka in the Modern Age: A History of Contested Identities. London: Hurst.Google Scholar
Williams, C. V. 2004. Jiddu Krisnamurti, World Philosopher (1895–1986): His Life and Thought. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.Google Scholar
Williams, Donovan. 1987. ‘The Indian Mutiny of 1857 at the Cape Colony, Part II: The Emergence of Black Consciousness in Caffraria’. Historia, 32/2: 5667.Google Scholar
Wink, André. 1990. Al Hind: The Making of the Indo-Islamic World. Vol. 1: Early Medieval India and the Expansion of Islam, 7th–11th Centuries. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Yadav, B. D. and Bakshi, S. R. 1991. Madam Bhikhamji Cama. New Delhi: Anmol.Google Scholar
Yakpo, Kofi and Muysken, Pieter. 2014. ‘Language Change in a Multiple Contact Setting: The Case of Sarnami (Suriname)’ in Buchstaller, Isabel, Holmberg, Anders and Almoally, Mohammad (eds.), Pidgins and Creoles beyond African-European Encounters. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamin: 101–40.Google Scholar
Yang, Anand A. 2003. ‘Indian Convict Workers in Southeast Asia in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries’. Journal of World History, 14/2: 179208.Google Scholar
Yang, Anand A. 2007. ‘(A) Subaltern(’s) Boxers: An Indian Soldier’s Account of China and the World in 19001901’ in Bickers, Robert and Tiedemann, R. G. (eds.), The Boxers, China and the World. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield: 4364.Google Scholar
Yang, Anand A. (ed. and trans.). 2017. Thirteen Months in China: A Subaltern Indian and the Colonial World. An Annotated Translation of Thakur Gadadhar Singh’s ‘Chin me tera mas. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Young, Desmond. 1959. Fountain of the Elephants (An Account of the Life of Count Benoît De Boigne). London: Collins.Google Scholar
Zachariah, Benjamin. 2010. ‘Rethinking (the Absence of) Fascism in India, c.1922–1945’ in Bose, Sugata and Manjapra, Kris (eds.), Cosmopolitan Thought Zones: South Asia and the Global Circulation of Ideas. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan:178209.Google Scholar
Cao, Yin. 2015. ‘Red Turbans on the Bund: Sikh Migrants, Policemen and Revolutionaries in Shanghai 1885–1945’. Unpublished PhD thesis, National University of Singapore.Google Scholar
Ebeling, Sascha. 2016. ‘From Malayalam Modernism to Global Modernism: Mahakavi Kumaran Asan’s “The Fallen Flower” (1907) and the Question of the Subject’. Paris: Centre of Indian and South Asian Studies.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Claude Markovits
  • Book: India and the World
  • Online publication: 19 March 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316899847.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Claude Markovits
  • Book: India and the World
  • Online publication: 19 March 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316899847.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Claude Markovits
  • Book: India and the World
  • Online publication: 19 March 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316899847.011
Available formats
×