Barun De
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Barun De (born October 30th, 1932) is an Indian historian whose main area of research is Modern India. He has specialised in the social and economic history of India in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Bengal Renaissance Movement, and British constitutional history.
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[edit] Biography
He was born in Calcutta to Basanta Kumar De, Esq., an officer of the Bengal Nagpur Railway and Pramila Dé [nee Gupta]. His paternal grandfather was Brajendranath De, Esq. ICS, who was a well known historian of medieval India. His maternal grand-uncle was Amrita Lal Gupta, a well known Brahmo preacher.
[edit] Career
[edit] Academic
He studied at Presidency College, Calcutta and holds an M.A. and D.Phil. in British Indian Constitutional History from St Catherine's Society, Oxford, and Nuffield College, Oxford. While in Oxford he was awarded the Curzon Memorial Essay Prize. He was Senior Professor of Social and Economic History and Post-Graduate Programme Director of the Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta. He was the First-Director of the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta (founded in 1973), where he was a Professor from 1973-93, and also of the Maulana Abul Kalam Azad Institute of Asian Studies, Calcutta (founded in 1993), where he was also a Maulana Azad Fellow and of whose Society he is now a member. He was conferred an Honorary D.Litt. by North Bengal University in 2000.
He has variously taught as Visiting Professor, Visiting Associate Professor and Tutor and held Directeurships at universities, institutes and colleges at Oxford, Duke, Simla, Paris, Milan, Sydney, Tashkent and the UNU.
[edit] Administrative
He was State Editor of the West Bengal District Gazetteers. He was elected the General President of the Indian History Congress, Dharwar Session, 1988 (of which he was a General Secretary from 1974-76). Presently, he is Chairman of the West Bengal Heritage Commission (of which was until recently a member), the Advisory Board of the Directorate of Archeology, Government of West Bengal, and the West Bengal State Archives. He was also Chairman of the Gurusaday Dutt Folk Art Society, Calcutta (on whose Governing Body he was a family nominee for several years). He was also the President of the Oxford India Majlis, of which he was the General Secretary as well. Presently, he is the Vice Chairman of the Centre for Archeology and Training, Eastern India, and is also a Vice President of the Asiatic Society, Calcutta.
He was and is a member of numerous organisations, including the Executive Council (Karma Samiti) of Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, Indian Council of Historical Research, New Delhi, (of which he was a member from its inception in 1972 to 1978, and then again from 2004 until the present), the general council of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, New Delhi, numerous committees of the Indian Council for Social Science Research, New Delhi, the Executive Councils of the Indian Statistical Institute, Calcutta, Centre for Development Studies, Trivandrum, A.N.Sinha Institute of Social Sciences, Patna, West Bengal Commission for the Planning of Higher Education, Heritage Buildings' Committee and the Road Renaming Committee of the Calcutta Municipal Corporation.
[edit] Ideology
Since the 1960s he has been intensely involved in the secular and Communist Movement in India. Through the 1970s, especially after the founding of the Centre for Studies in Social Sciences in Calcutta, he was criticised by right-wing and communal historians for his involvement in Marxist historiography. He was known both for his rejection of the historiography produced by the Bharatiya Vidya Bhawan Series, as well as his severe condemnation of the Emergency between 1975 and 1977. The communalised forces' attacks on the Congress and the left intensified and then peaked in the period between 1977-80 when the first non-Congress government was formed at the Centre. Under the orders of the then union cabinet, he was once again abused by right-wing historians in the Jansatta, the mouthpiece of the Jan Sangh, which had not criticised the imposition of the Emergency. Through the 1980s, he remained vocal in his criticism of the communal forces, in his articles and lectures, especially those delivered at the annual Indian History Congress sessions. In the 1990s too, after the founding of the Maulana Abul Kalam Azad Institute of Asian Studies in Calcutta, he was bitterly criticised in certain quarters, mainly in Delhi, for his steadfast support for leftwing, secular and progressive history writing in India and its application to Area Studies.
Most recently, in 2004, he was appointed to a national level committee appointed by the ruling UPA Government to review the textbooks published by the NCERT under the NDA regime. The committee in its report recommended the removal of the history textbooks, mainly on the grounds of being totally biased towards the historiography produced by communal historians and also because they were full of glaring factual and interpretative errors. The newspaper reports, on the findings of the committee, were predictably polarised. The first group of newspapers, consisting of leftwing and centrist newspapers, were supportive of the recommendations of the committee.[1],[2] A second group of newspapers supported the efforts of the secular historians to detoxify the previous regimes history textbooks, but suggested that the NCERT history textbooks could be reviewed periodically in order to make them relevant to the time they are being taught in.[3] A third group of newspapers, both published from India and the west, have been either very sceptical or openly hostile to him and other committee members for the views they expressed in the report.[4],[5] This issue remains very relevant and a vexious one in contemporary Indian politics.
[edit] Publications
[edit] Books
- Secularism at Bay: Uzbekistan at the Turn of the Century (New Delhi, 2006)
- (ed.) State, Development and Political Culture: Bangladesh and India, (New Delhi, 1997) (Co-edited with Ranabir Samaddar)
- (ed.) Mukti Sangrame Banglar Chatro-Chamaj (Students of Bengal in the Struggle of Liberation) (in Bengali), (Calcutta: Paschim Banga Itihas Samsad, 1992)
- (ed.) West Bengal District Gazetteers, 24 Parganas, (Calcutta, 1983)
- (ed.) West Bengal District Gazetteers, Darjeeling, (Calcutta, 198?)
- (ed.) Perspectives in Social Sciences, 1: Historical Dimensions (New Delhi, 1977)[6]
- (ed.) Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, (Calcutta: Jadavpur Session, 1974)
- (ed.) Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, (Aligarh: Aligarh Session, 1975)
- (ed.) Essays in Honour of Professor Sushobhan Chandra Sarkar (New Delhi, 1975)
- Freedom Struggle (New Delhi, 1972), (Co-authored with Bipan Chandra and Amalesh Tripathi)[7]
[edit] Select Articles
- "Religion and Material Life in Ancient India: D.D.Kosambi and Niharranjan Ray", in Irfan Habib, Religion in Indian History, [New Delhi: Tulika, 2007].
- "The Call of 1857", in Frontline, Volume 24, Issue 12, June 16-29, 2007.
- "The Ideological and Social Background of Haidar Ali and Tipu Sultan," in Irfan Habib, (ed.), Resistance & Modernisation under Haidar Ali & Tipu Sultan, (New Delhi: Tulika for Indian History Congress, 1999)[8]
- "Imperialism, Nationalism and the Dialectics of Changing Identity in the Indian Subcontinent" in Joachim Heidrich (ed.), Berlin Forschungsschwerpunkt Moderner Orient Seminar on Changing Identities: Indigenous and Alien Factors Shaping Asian and African Societies under Colonialism, (Berlin, 1993)
- "Nationalism as a Binding Force: The Dialectics of the Historical Course of Nationalism", Occasional Paper, No. 93, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, (Calcutta, 1987)
- "The Canberra Outlook on the Indian Freedom Struggle", in The Indian Historical Review, Vol. IV, No. 2, (1979)
- "The Colonial Context of Modernisation in 19th Century Bengal", in C.H.Philips and M.D.Wainright, (ed.), Indian Society and the Beginnings of Modernisation, (London, 1976)
- "A Biographical Perspective on the Political and Economic Ideas of Rammohun Ray", in V.C.Joshi, (ed.), Rammohun Roy and the Process of Modernisation in India, (New Delhi, 1975)
- "A Historical Perspective on Theories of Regionalism in India", in Robert I. Crane, (ed.), Studies on Regions and Regionalism in South Asia, (Durham, 1967)
- "If They Have no Wheat, Then Give Them Milo", Now, (August 1966)
- "The Death of a Maharani: an Annal of Rural Bengal", Economic Weekly, (November 23–30, 1963)
[edit] References
- ^ Dinesh Chandra, "Leading Historians for Immediate Withdrawal of Current NCERT History Books", Peoples Democracy (Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of (India Marxist), Vol. XXVIII, No. 27, July 4, 2004
- ^ Nalini Taneja, "On History Textbook Reviews", in People's Democracy (Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of (India Marxist), Vol. XXVIII, No. 25, June 20, 2004
- ^ Parvathi Menon, "Detoxifying Texts", in Frontline, Vol. 21, Issue 15, July 17-30, 2004
- ^ Udayan Namboodiri, Big Brother Disapproves of NCERT Books,, July 16-31, 2004, Vol. 13, No. 14, in BJP Today
- ^ Scot Bauldauf, "India Considers Historic Rewrite", in Christian Science Monitor, July 16, 2004
- ^ David L.Curley (reviewer), Perspectives in Social Sciences I: Historical Dimension, in The Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 40, No. 1, (Nov. 1980), pp. 158-60
- ^ S.Gopal, "The Fear of History", in Seminar, April, 2001
- ^ Naresh Nadeem, "On Two Great Plebian Rulers of Mysore", review of Irfan Habib (ed.), Resistance and Modernisation under Haidar Ali and Tipu Sultan (New Delhi: Tulika for Indian History Congress, 1999)
[edit] External links
- Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
- Maulana Abul Kalam Azad Institute of Asian Studies, Calcutta
Academic offices | ||
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Preceded by Institute Founded |
Director of the CSSSC 1973-1983 |
Succeeded by Surajit Sinha |