Ramachandra Guha

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Ramachandra Guha in Chennai
Ramachandra Guha in Chennai

Ramachandra Guha (1958 - ) is an Indian historian and biographer whose research interests have included environment, social, political and cricket history. He is also a columnist for the newspapers The Hindu, The Hindustan Times and The Telegraph.

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[edit] Life and career

Born in Dehra Dun in 1958, Guha studied at The Doon School and St. Stephen's College, Delhi. He graduated in Economics with a BA in 1977 and then an MA from the Delhi School of Economics, and did his PhD in Sociology at the Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta, with a dissertation on the social history of forestry in Uttaranchal, that focused on the Chipko movement. It was later published as The Unquiet Woods. Between 1985 and 2000, he taught at various universities in India, Europe and North America, including the University of California, Berkeley, Yale University, Stanford University and at Oslo University, and later at the Indian Institute of Science.

Since then, he moved to Bangalore, and began writing full time. He served as Sundaraja Visiting Professor in the Humanities at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, in 2003. He is managing trustee of the New India Foundation, a nonprofit body that funds research on modern Indian history. Guha is married to the graphic designer Sujata Keshavan and has two children.

He is the author of a bestselling history of independent India titled "India After Gandhi", published by Macmillan and Ecco in 2007.

[edit] Awards and recognition

[edit] Controversy

Guha created a stir in 2000 when he criticized novelist and activist Arundhati Roy for an emotionally charged article[2] she had written opposing the Narmada Dam. Roy espoused the cause of the Narmada Bachao Andolan, a cause Guha supported too. While he characterized her as courageous, he questioned her judgement and intellectual probity. He ended his critique by suggesting she should stick to fiction.[3] Amidst the ensuing uproar, Roy chose to respond in an interview, summing up Guha as an ecological historian who had missed the boat.[4]

[edit] Bibliography

  • The Unquiet Woods: Ecological Change and Peasant Resistance in the Himalaya (University of California, Berkeley press; Oxford University Press (OUP)) (1989)
  • This Fissured Land: An Ecological History of India (OUP) (with Madhav Gadgil, 1992)
  • Wickets in the East (OUP) (1992)
  • Social Ecology (OUP) (Editor, with T.N. Madan, 1994)
  • Spin and Other Turns (Penguin) (1994)
  • An Indian Cricket Omnibus (OUP) (Editor, with T.G. Vaidyanathan, 1994)
  • Ecology and Equity (with Madhav Gadgil, 1995) (Penguin)
  • Varieties of Environmentalism: Essays North and South (with Joan Martinez-Alier, 1997)
  • Savaging the Civilized — Verrier Elwin, his tribals and India(University of Chicago Press; OUP)(1999)
  • An Anthropologist Among the Marxists, and other essays (Permanent Black) (2000)
  • Environmentalism: A global history (OUP) (2000)
  • The Picador Book of Cricket (Picador) (Editor, 2001)
  • A Corner of a Foreign Field - An Indian history of a British sport (Picador) (2001)
  • An Indian cricket century (Editor, works of Sujit Mukherjee, 2002)
  • The Last Liberal and Other Essays (Permanent Black, 2004)
  • The States of Indian Cricket (Permanent Black) (2005)
  • How Much Should a Person Consume?: Thinking Through the Environment(University of California, Berkeley Press; Permanent Black) (2006)
  • India after Gandhi: The history of the world's largest democracy (Ecco) (2007)
  • Institutions and Inequalities: Essays in Honour of Andre Beteille (with Jonathan P. Parry)
  • Nature's Spokesman: M. Krishnan and Indian Wildlife (editor, works of M. Krishnan)
  • Nature, Culture, Imperialism: Essays on the Environmental History of South Asia (with David Arnold)

[edit] References

  1. ^ Foreign Policy: Top 100 Intellectuals
  2. ^ Roy, Arundhati. The Greater Common Good. Retrieved on 2006-09-18.
  3. ^ Guha, Ramachandra. The Arun Shourie of the left. Retrieved on 2006-09-18.
  4. ^ Ram, Narasimhan. Scimitars in the Sun. Frontline. Retrieved on 2006-09-18.

[edit] External links