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India in the World Economy
From Antiquity to the Present

This enthralling book offers a new approach to Indian economic history, placing trade and mercantile activity in the region within a global framework.

Tirthankar Roy (Author)

9781107401471, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 18 June 2012

298 pages, 23 b/w illus. 6 maps 7 tables
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.41 kg

'… this book … represents an unprecedented effort that must be the foundation for further advances in our understanding of the long history of India as a global entity.' Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies

Cross-cultural exchange has characterized the economic life of India since antiquity. Its long coastline has afforded convenient access to Asia and Africa as well as trading partnerships formed in the exchange of commodities ranging from textiles to military technology and from opium to indigo. In a journey across two thousand years, this enthralling book, written by a leading South Asian historian, describes the ties of trade, migration, and investment between India and the rest of the world and shows how changing patterns of globalization have reverberated in economic policy, politics, and political ideology within India. Along the way, the book asks three major questions: Is this a particularly Indian story? When did the big turning points happen? And is it possible to distinguish the modern from the pre-modern pattern of exchange? These questions invite a new approach to the study of Indian history by placing the region at the center of the narrative. This is global history written on India's terms, and, as such, the book invites Indian, South Asian, and global historians to rethink both their history and their methodologies.

Preface
1. Introduction: India and global history
2. Ports and hinterlands to 1200
3. Receding land frontiers, 1200–1700
4. The Indian Ocean trade, 1500–1800
5. Trade, migration, and investment, 1800–50
6. Trade, migration, and investment, 1850–1920
7. Colonialism and development, 1860–1920
8. Depression and decolonization, 1920–50
9. From trade to aid, 1950–80
10. Return to market, 1980–2010
11 Conclusion: A new India?

Subject Areas: Economic history [KCZ], Asian history [HBJF], History [HB]

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