"To compensate a little for the treachery and weakness of my memory, so extreme that it has happened to me more than once to pick up again, as recent and unknown to me, books which I had read carefully a few years before . . . I have adopted the habit for some time now of adding at the end of each book . . . the time I finished reading it and the judgment I have derived of it as a whole, so that this may represent to me at least the sense and general idea I had conceived of the author in reading it." (Montaigne, Book II, Essay 10 (publ. 1580))

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

The Chaos of Empire - The British Raj and the Conquest of India (Jon Wilson, 2016)

(504 pp)

Another recent book reviewing the history of the Brits in India.  As with this book (but in a different way), the author looks to challenge the view that Britain provided order if not enlightenment to significant benefit for India.  Author instead seeks to show that the British project was "rooted far more in violence than virtue, far more in chaos than in control."

Which seems right . . . but somehow the author seems to strain a bit too hard to make the point, constantly tossing in loaded words.

Still, this was useful in filling in more pieces of the puzzle.

A few things I noted:

1.  I didn't read this for a geography lesson, but the author had a comprehensible way of describing the country's geography and physical features in big-picture terms.  Including why that strip along the southwest coast is so different.

2.  Useful description of the incremental approach by which the British exerted control over various portions of the country.  Opportunistic not planned.  Business concerns not "good governance."  Widely varying structures (fortified ports from the 1600s; Clive's eastern India territories; Mysore/Marathas collaboration; "cantonments" in native states); never brought together effectively.

3.  I liked the discussion of the governance structures that preceded the Brits.  India was a sophisticated place where things worked reasonably well even if Mughals were in decline.  The story line has been that India needed the Brits to oversee the anarchic (backward) locals, but that seems to be mostly a story.  Brits mostly succeeded in breaking the old governance patterns without adequate replacement. 

4.  And many local bonds broke as new land policies etc. were pursued.  Of course that may have happened with or without the Brits.  Interesting idea that religious affiliation may have intensified because so many other bonds broke down; the idea is cited in Bengal/Calcutta breakdowns in the run-up to WWII (and the Partition violence; unaffiliated males migrate and cluster.

5.  Pretty much no discussion of caste.

6.  Discussing the thin overlay of Brit authority; but for many influential Indians the Brits were a source of order (profit) given that other structures were no longer operative, so there were plenty of locals willing to support the Brits.

7.  The dramatic effect of 1857 ("mutiny" or "rebellion" depending on one's perspective).  Delhi pretty much starts over.

8.  Brits managing to avoid socializing with or otherwise getting to know Indians.  Kind of weird.

9.  Robert Clive - perhaps the best opportunist on the scene.

Monday, December 11, 2017

The Shadow of the Wind (Carlos Ruiz Zafon, 2001)

(487 pages)

Book club selection (via NOC; session held 9 December 2017).

Protagonist Daniel - son of a bookseller - is taken by his father to the Cemetery of Forgotten Books - where he takes responsibility for a novel by a certain Julian Carax.  From there the author takes us on a journey around Barcelona (with a stop in Paris) over the course of quite a few years, with the main action taking place in and around the time of the Spanish Civil War.  Involving Julian's school pals, Fermin, three women, etc., etc.

Beautifully written.  Perhaps too many plot twists - made it challenging for the author to tie it all together - but this also kept things moving along.

Monday, December 04, 2017

Bhagavad-Gita (between 5th and 2nd centuries BCE?)

(130 pages)

Wasn't familiar with this until Dharma sent us a link to a TED talk - in which a pretty engaging speaker sought to pull some lessons for current application - the talk was good enough to encourage me to read the entire work.

Which consists of 700 verses in the midst of a very long Hindu epic named Mahabharata.

Prince Arjuna is speaking to his charioteer Lord Krishna - though not recognizing him until later in the discussion.  The conversation takes place just before what is certain to be a major battle - Arjuna recognizes family and friends on the other side - despairs whether fighting is the right thing to do.  Lord Krishna explains why Arjuna should fight; speaks with compassion, insight, patience (and much much more); lets Arjuna make his own decision.

Useful thoughts throughout; many overlap, almost down to the word, with Bible passages.  I liked Krishna's way of advising to focus on what one can control without being overly concerned with the outcome; with doing one's duties well, choosing responsibilities wisely, in part to reciprocate for what's been given.

"See a bit of yourself in everything around you, and a bit of everything in you" - nice.

Some discussion of castes; need to figure out better how this fits in.