James Mill’s History of British India (1817) played a major role in re-shaping the English policy and attitudes in India throughout the nineteenth century. This article questions the widely held view that the ‘HBI’ heralded the utilitarian justification of colonisation found for instance in John Stuart Mill’s writings. It suggests that James Mill’s role as a proponent of ‘utilitarian imperialism’ has been overstated, and argues that much of Mill’s criticism of Indian society arose from the continuing influence of his religious education as well as from his links with a network of Presbyterian and Evangelical thinkers. It is only after his death that the colonialist views put forward in the History of British India were re- interpreted in li...
Abstract India became the site for colonial representation under the British rule in the nineteenth...
The dissertation explores the problematic of idolatry in relation to literary and scholarly repres...
English education was introduced by the British with the twin purpose of impressing upon the natives...
© The Author(s) 2020. John Stuart Mill’s justification for British rule in India is well known. Less...
This thesis argues that James Mill's History of British India is, on the one hand, intellectually l...
This article argues for a reassessment of James Mill’s anticlerical, and possibly atheistic, brand o...
This article focuses on the studies and discourses of mostly British scholars of the early colonial ...
Some critics of Mill understand him to advocate the forced assimilation of people he regards as unci...
Upon taking the reins of power in the South Asian Sub-continent, the East India Company officials, b...
Colonial historiography involves writing history of a colony by the metropolis, according to it's ow...
This dissertation suggests we regard critics of empire as belonging to a subcategory of the dominant...
This independent study attempts to examine the motives behind several movements for policy changes i...
This essay will focus on whether or not dominant presence of Britain in India during the eighteenth ...
This dissertation seeks to examine the religious ideas in Mill's writings. Recipient of a unique edu...
How did the Indian ‛ūlamā’ go from being an intellectual-literary elite in pre-British India to beco...
Abstract India became the site for colonial representation under the British rule in the nineteenth...
The dissertation explores the problematic of idolatry in relation to literary and scholarly repres...
English education was introduced by the British with the twin purpose of impressing upon the natives...
© The Author(s) 2020. John Stuart Mill’s justification for British rule in India is well known. Less...
This thesis argues that James Mill's History of British India is, on the one hand, intellectually l...
This article argues for a reassessment of James Mill’s anticlerical, and possibly atheistic, brand o...
This article focuses on the studies and discourses of mostly British scholars of the early colonial ...
Some critics of Mill understand him to advocate the forced assimilation of people he regards as unci...
Upon taking the reins of power in the South Asian Sub-continent, the East India Company officials, b...
Colonial historiography involves writing history of a colony by the metropolis, according to it's ow...
This dissertation suggests we regard critics of empire as belonging to a subcategory of the dominant...
This independent study attempts to examine the motives behind several movements for policy changes i...
This essay will focus on whether or not dominant presence of Britain in India during the eighteenth ...
This dissertation seeks to examine the religious ideas in Mill's writings. Recipient of a unique edu...
How did the Indian ‛ūlamā’ go from being an intellectual-literary elite in pre-British India to beco...
Abstract India became the site for colonial representation under the British rule in the nineteenth...
The dissertation explores the problematic of idolatry in relation to literary and scholarly repres...
English education was introduced by the British with the twin purpose of impressing upon the natives...