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The Competition Wallah
Trevelyan's fictionalised letters chart the changing attitudes of an Englishman in India in the years around the 1857–1859 Mutiny.
George Otto Trevelyan (Author)
9781108023528, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 9 December 2010
470 pages
21.6 x 14 x 2.7 cm, 0.59 kg
Sir George Otto Trevelyan's Competition Wallah was published in 1864 after previous serialisation in Macmillan's Magazine. Consisting of a series of letters from Henry Broughton, an imaginary young civil servant fresh from Cambridge, to a friend, the work was well-received in Britain and India, although it raised controversy in the Anglo-Indian community for its exposure of the attitudes of the British settlers to the Indian people in the wake of the Mutiny of 1857–1859. Extraordinary and courageous for its time, this book examines society in India, exploring the gulf of misunderstanding and racial prejudice, and attempting to bridge the gap between the early nineteenth-century reformist attitude and the defensive militarist imperialism of the latter half of the century. It is also notable for containing the first full publication in the west of the highly influential 'Minute on Education' of 1835 by Trevelyan's uncle, Thomas Babington Macaulay.
Letter of introduction
1. The two systems
2. An Indian railway
3. A government school and an opium factory
4. A story of the great mutiny
5. A journey, a grand tumasha, and the truth about the civil service career
6. A tiger-party in Nepaul
7. About Calcutta and its climate
8. About the Hindoo character
9. British temper towards India, before, during, and since the mutiny
10. The 'Anglo-Saxon' party in India
11. Christianity in India
12. Education in India since 1835 Thomas Babington Macaulay.
Subject Areas: Asian history [HBJF]
