History 5th Sem Syllabus
History 5th Sem Syllabus
DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY
COURSES OFFERED BY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY
Category I
[UG Programme for Bachelor in History (Honours) degree in three years]
Course title & Code Credits Credit distribution of the course Eligibility Pre-requisite
Lecture Tutorial Practical/ criteria of the course
Practice (if any)
History of India – V: 4 3 1 0 12 th Pass Should have
c. 1500 – 1600 studied History
of India
– IV: c. 1200 –
1500
Learning Objectives
The course is intended to engage students into a critical discussion of political, institutional and
cultural processes that led to the establishment and consolidation of theMughal state in India. It
also provides a basic understanding of major developments in other regions of the Indian sub-
continent not ruled by the Mughals in the sixteenth century. The students would familiarise
themselves with the nature and variety of sources as well as the diverse and uneven ways in which
historians have treated and interpreted them
Learning outcomes
Upon completion of this course the student shall be able to:
• Critically evaluate major sources available in Persian and vernacular languages forthe
period under study
• Compare, discuss and examine the varied scholarly perspectives on the issues ofthe
establishment and consolidation of the Mughal state.
• Explain the religious milieu of the time by engaging with some prominent religious
traditions.
• Discuss how different means such as visual culture was used to articulate authorityby the
rulers
• Discern the nuances of the process of state formation in the areas beyond thedirect
control of the Mughal state.
SYLLABUS OF DSC
Unit I: Sources and Historiography
1. An overview of Persian Literary Traditions
2. Vernacular Literature- Brajbhasha and Telugu/Tamil
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Unit II: Political Formations and Institutions
1. Mughal state- Role of Military tactics and technology; Changing notions ofKingship
; Institutions (Evolution of Mansab, Jagir and land revenue system)
2. Rajput and Ahom Political culture
3. Formation of Nayaka states of Madurai, Thanjavur and Jinji
Essential/recommended readings
Unit I. This unit introduces students to the available Persian and vernacular literary sources
for the study of the period under study. It also provides an opportunity to the students
to critically analyse these sources based on their modern historiographical
interpretations. (Teaching Time: 9 hrs. approx.)
Essential Readings:
• Rizvi, S. A. A. (1975)- Religious and Intellectual History of the Muslims During the Reign
of Akbar (1556-1605), Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal
• Truschke, Audrey (2016). Culture of Encounters, New Delhi: Penguin Allen Lane,
(Chapter 4 ‘Abul Fazl Redefines Islamicate Knowledge and Akbar’s Sovereignty’, pp.
142- 165)
• Alam, Muzaffar (2004). Languages of Political Islam, Delhi: Permanent Black, (Chapter
4, ‘Language and Power’, pp. 115-140)
• Ali, S Athar. (1992). “Translations of Sanskrit Works at Akbar’s Court” Social Scientist,
vol. 20 no.9, pp, 38-45
• Busch, Allison (2005), “Literary Responses to the Mughal Imperium: the Historical
Poems of Kesavdas” in South Asia Research, Vol. 25, No.1, pp 31-54
• Busch, Allison (2010) “Hidden in Plain view: Brajbhasha poets at the MughalCourt”
• Modern Asian Studies. Vol. 44, No.2, pp 267-309
• Sharma, Sandhya (2011). Literature, Culture and History in Mughal NorthIndia,
1550- 1800, Delhi: Primus (Introduction and Chapter 5)
• Rao, V N, David Shulman, and Sanjay Subrahmanyam (eds.) (2001). Textures ofTime:
Writing History in South India 1600-1800, Delhi: Permanent Black
• Sreenivasan, Ramya (2014) “Rethinking Kingship and Authority in South Asia: Amber
(Rajasthan), Ca. 1560-1615.” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient
57, no. 4, pp 549–86
81
Unit II. This unit enables students to understand the various contexts and processes involved
in the establishment and consolidation of the Mughal state encompassing such
themes as the role of military tactics and technology,legitimacy through innovative
notions of kingship and administrative institutions. Besides the Mughal state, it also
discusses other political formations, some of considerable resilience and importance
that complicated the processes of imperial integration. To provide a rounded picture
of these developments the unit also discusses the histories of the emerging Rajput
regimes. To underline the variegated nature of politics of this period, the unit also
studies the Nayaka state formation in South India. (Teaching Time- 15 hrs. approx.)
• Gommans, Jos J L. (2002). Mughal Warfare: Indian Frontiers and Highroads to
Empire, 1500-1700, London and New York: Routledge
• Gommans, Jos J L & Dirk H A Kolff, eds. (2001). Warfare and Weaponry inSouth
Asia 1000-1800, New Delhi: OUP, (Introduction)
• Streusand, Douglas E. (1989). The Formation of the Mughal Empire, Delhi:
Oxford University Press
• Tripathi, R P. (1959). Some Aspects of Muslim Administration. Allahabad: TheIndian
Press. (Chapter on ‘Turko-Mongol Theory of Kingship’)
• Khan, I.A. (1972). “The Turko-Mongol Theory of Kingship”, in K A Nizami (Ed.).
• Medieval India-A Miscellany, Vol. II, London: Asia Publishing House.
• Richards, J F. (1996). The Mughal Empire, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
(Introduction & Chapters 1-4)
• Alam, M and S Subrahmanyam (eds.) (1998). The Mughal State, 1526-1750, Delhi:
OUP, (Introduction)
• Ali, S Athar (Revised 1997) -The Mughal Nobility Under Aurangzeb, Delhi: Oxford
University Press (Chapter 2)
• Moosvi, Shireen. (1981). “The Evolution of the Mansab System under Akbar until
1596- 97”, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland, Vol. 113 No.
2, pp. 173-85,
• Habib, Irfan (1999), The Agrarian System of Mughal India (1556-1707), OUP, New Delhi
(Chapter 6)
• Khan, IqtidarAlam (1968). “The Nobility Under Akbar and the Development of his
Religious Policy ,1560-80”, Journal of Royal Asiatic Society, No 1-2 , pp.29- 36
• Ziegler, Norman P (1998)- “Some Notes on Rajput Loyalties During the MughalPeriod”
in John F. Richards, (Ed.). Kingship and Authority in South Asia, Delhi: Oxford University
Press, pp. 242-284.
• Zaidi, S Inayat A. (1997). “Akbar and Rajput Principalities- Integration into Empire” in
Irfan Habib (ed.) Akbar and His India, Delhi: Oxford University Press
• Chandra, Satish. (1993). Mughal Religious Policies, The Rajputs and The Deccan, Delhi:
Vikas Publishing House.
• Balabanlilar, Lisa (2013). Imperial Identity in the Mughal Empire, New Delhi: Viva
Books. (Introduction and Chapters 1 and 2)
• Rao, V N, David Shulman, and S. Subrahmanyam (1992). Symbols ofSubstance: Court
and State in Nayaka Period Tamilnadu, Delhi: Oxford University Press
• Rao, V, & Subrahmanyam, S. (2012). ‘Ideologies of state building in Vijayanagara and
post-Vijayanagara south India: Some reflections’ In P. Bang& D. Kolodziejczyk (Eds.),
Universal Empire: A Comparative Approach to Imperial Culture and Representation in
Eurasian History, Cambridge,Cambridge University Press, pp 210-232
82
• Dirks, Nicholas B (2007). The Hollow Crown. Ethnohistory of an Indian Kingdom,
• Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Introduction)
• Howes, Jennifer (2003). The Courts of Pre-colonial South India, London: Routledge.
(Introduction and Chapter 3)
• Karashima, Noboru (1985). “Nayaka Rule in North and South Arcot Districts in South
India During the 16th Century”, Acta Asiatica, Vol. 48, pp. 1-25
UNIT III: This unit seeks to capture the political and religious milieu of the times focussing on
developments in Indian Islam as well as more generally on cross- cutting ideas in
circulation in north India manifested in the teachings of Vaishnava Bhakti saints.
(Teaching Time: 12 hrs. approx.)
• Rizvi, S.A.A. (1975). Religious and Intellectual History of the Muslims During the Reign
of Akbar (1556-1605). New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal
• Alam, Muzaffar (2004). The Languages of Political Islam: India (1200-1800), Delhi:
Permanent Black (Introduction, Chapters 2 and 5)
• Ali, S Athar (2008), “Sulh-i-Kul and Religious Ideas of Akbar” in Mughal India: Studies
in Polity, Ideas, Society and Culture, Delhi: Oxford University Press
• Moosvi, Shireen (2007). “The Road to Sulh-i-Kul: Akbar’s Alienation from Theological
Islam” in Irfan Habib (ed.) Religion in History, Delhi: Tulika
• Friedman, Yohanan (1971), Shaykh Ahmad Sirhindi: An Outline of His Thought and a
Study of His Image in the Eyes of Posterity, McGill- Queen’s University Press, Montreal
(Introduction)
• Lorenzen, David N. (1995). Bhakti Religion in North India: Community Identity and
Political Action, New York: State University of New York Press (Introduction)
• Chatterjee, K. (2009). “Cultural Flows and Cosmopolitanism in Mughal India: The
Bishnupur Kingdom”, Indian Economic and Social History Review, vol. 46, No. 2, pp.
147- 82.
• Dalmia, Vasudha (2015), ‘Hagiography and the “other” in the Vallabha Sampradaya’
in Vasudha Dalmia and Munis D Faruqi (eds), Religious Interactions in Mughal India,
New Delhi, OUP.
• Stewart, Tony K (2013), ‘Religion in Subjunctive: Vaishnava Narrative Sufi Counter-
Narrative in Early Modern Bengal’, The Journal of Hindu Studies, Vol 6, pp 52-72
Unit IV: This unit focuses on the nuanced usage of visual culture (particularly architecture) an
effective means to articulate authority by rulers of different backgrounds and political
ambitions. (Teaching Time: 9 hrs. approx.)
• Asher, Catherine B. (1992). Architecture of Mughal India, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press (PP 51-74)
• Brand, Michael, and Glen D Lowry (Eds.). (1987). Fatehpur Sikri, Bombay: Marg
Publications (Chapters 2-7)
• Koch, Ebba. (2002). Mughal Architecture: An Outline of its History and Development,
1526-1858, New Delhi, New York: Oxford University Press (Introduction, Chapter on
Akbar)
• Sharma, Rita and Sharma, Vijay (2020), Forts of Rajasthan, Rupa Publications
• Jaweed, Md Salim (2012), ‘Rajput Architecture of Mewar From 13th to 18th
Centuries”,
• PIHC, Vol 73, pp 400-407
83
• Asher, Catherine B (2020), ‘Making Sense of Temples and Tirthas: Rajput Construction
Under Mughal Rule’, The Medieval History Journal, Vol 23, Part1, pp 9-49
• Tillotson, Giles Henry Rupert (1987). The Rajput Palaces: The development of an
architectural style, 1450-1750. Yale Univ. Press, (Chapters 1-3)
• Mitchell, George. (1995). Architecture and Art of Southern India: Vijayanagara and the
Successor States 1350-1750, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
• Eaton, Richard M. And Phillip B. Wagoner. (2014). Power, Memory, Architecture:
Contested Sites on India's Deccan Plateau, 1300-1600. New Delhi:Oxford University
Press. (Chapters 2 and 3)
• Karashima, Noboru (2014). A Concise History of South India: Issues and
Interpretations,
• New Delhi,Oxford University Press. (Section 6.1-6.6)
• Rao, V N, David Shulman, and S. Subrahmanyam. (1992). Symbols of Substance: Court
and State in Nayaka Period Tamilnadu, Delhi: Oxford University Press
Suggestive readings
• Eaton, Richard (2019). India in the Persianate Age, 1000-1765, New Delhi, Penguin
Allen Lane (Chapter 5).
• Kolff, Dirk H.A. (1990). Naukar, Rajput and Sepoy: the Ethnohistory of the military
labour market in Hindustan, 1450-1850. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp.
1-116 (valuable for the social contexts of political and military expansion in the 16th
century).
• Talbot, Cynthia (2013), ‘Becoming Turk the Rajput Way: Conversion & Identity in an
Indian Warrior Narrative’, Richard Eaton et al, Expanding Frontiers in South Asian and
World History, Essays in Honour of JF Richards, Cambridge University Press
• RaziuddinAquil. (2007). Sufism, Culture and Politics: Afghans and Islam in Medieval
North India, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
• Richards, J F. (1998). “The Formulation of Imperial Authority under Akbar and
Jahangir” in Kingship and Authority in South Asia, Delhi: Oxford University Press, pp.
285-326.
• Sharma, Krishna (2003). Bhakti and Bhakti Movement, Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal
Publishers
• Habib, Irfan (ed.1997) Akbar and His India, Delhi: Oxford University Press
• Siddiqui, N A. (reprint 1989). Land Revenue Administration under the Mughals(1700-
1750). New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers
• Chandra, Satish. (Ed.) (2005). Religion, State and Society in Medieval India: Collected
Works of Nurul Hasan, Delhi: Oxford University Press
• Aquil, Raziuddin and Kaushik Roy (2012)- Warfare, Religion and Society in Indian
History, Delhi: Manohar publishers and Distributors (Chapters 3 and 4)
• Nizami, K A (1983). On History and Historians of Medieval India, New Delhi: Vedic
Books
• Spear, Percival (2009). “The Mughal Mansabdari System” in Edmund Leechand S
N Mukherjee (eds.) Elites in South Asia, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
• Alam, Muzaffar (2021). The Mughal and the Sufis: Islam and Political Imagination in
India, Ranikhet: Permanent Black, pp 1-93 (Chapters 1 and 2)
• Talbot, Cynthia, and Catherine B Asher (2006). India Before Europe, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press
84
• Bahugana, R.P. (2008). “Kabir and other Medieval Saints in Vaishnava Tradition”, PIHC,
Vol. 69, pp 373-383
• Rezavi, Nadeem, (2013) Fatehpur Sikri Revisited, OUP. Readings in Hindi Medium
• Chandra, Satish (2018). Madhyakalin Bharat (Part II), Sultanat se Mughal Ka lTak, New
Delhi: Jawahar Publishers & Distributors
• Habib, Irfan (Ed.).(2000). Madhyakalin Bharat, (Vols. 1-8, relevant articles), New Delhi:
Rajkamal Prakashan
• Habib, Irfan (Ed.). (2016). Akbar Aur Tatkaleen Bharat, New Delhi: Rajkamal Prakashan
• Habib, Irfan. (2017). Madhyakalin Bharat ka ArthikItihas: Ek Sarvekshan, NewDelhi:
Rajkamal Prakashan
• Verma H C. (Ed.) (2017). Madhyakalin Bharat (Vol. II) 1540-1761, HindiMadhyam
Karyanvan Nideshalaya, Delhi University
• Mukhia Harbans (2008), Bhartiya Mughal, Urdu Bazaar, New Delhi
85
DISCIPLINE SPECIFIC CORE COURSE – 2 (DSC-2): History of India – VI: c. 1750 – 1857
Course title & Credits Credit distribution of the course Eligibility Pre-requisite
Code Lecture Tutorial Practical/ criteria of the course
Practice (if any)
History of India – 4 3 1 0 12 th Pass Should have
VI: c. 1750 – 1857 studied History
of India
– IV: c. 1200 –
1500
Learning Objectives
The paper introduces students to key features of the 18th century in the Indian subcontinent. It
analyses the interface between the 18th century kingdoms and the early colonial state. The pa-per
also discusses the processes by which the British East India Company transformed itself into a state
and gradually consolidated its position over a vast expanse. Apart from the evolution of colonial
institutions of governance and developing forms of colonial exploitation, the paper also highlights
the interface between Company Raj and indigenous elite on various social issues. The paper
concludes with a critical survey of peasant resistance to colonial agrarian policies, and the 1857
revolt against the Company Raj.
Learning outcomes
Upon completion of this course the student shall be able to:
• Outline key developments of the 18th century in the Indian subcontinent.
• Explain the establishment of Company rule and important features of theearly
colonial regime.
• Explain the peculiarities of evolving colonial institutions and their impact.
• Elucidate the impact of colonial rule on the economy.
• Discuss the social churning on questions of tradition, reform, etc. during thefirst
century of British colonial rule.
• Assess the issues of landed elites, and those of struggling peasants, tribals and
artisans during the Company Raj.
SYLLABUS OF DSC
Unit I: India in the mid-18th Century: society, economy, polity and culture
86
1. Issues and Debates
2. Continuity and change
Unit II: Colonial expansion: policies and methods with reference to any two of the following
Bengal, Mysore, Marathas, Awadh, Punjab and the North- East
Essential/recommended readings
Unit-I: This Unit enables the students to outline key developments of the 18th
century in the Indian subcontinent. These developments are discussed through key debates
on the varied historical evidence used by historians when examining the weakening Mughal
state, growth of regional kingdoms, changing dynamics of the economy, evolving social
structures, cultural patterns, etc. (Teaching Time: 9 hrs. approx.)
• Alavi, Seema(ed.). (2002). The Eighteenth Century in India. New Delhi: OUP
(Introduction).
• Bayly, C.A. 1988. Indian Society and the making of the British Empire. Cambridge: CUP
(Chapter1, pp. 7- 44).
• Parthasarathi, Prasannan. 2011. Why Europe Grew Rich and Asia Did Not: Global
Economic Divergence, 1600- 1850. Cambridge: CUP (Introduction and Part I, pp. 1-88;
Part III, pp. 185- 269).
• Faruqui, Munis D. 2013. “At Empire’s End: The Nizam, Hyderabad and Eighteenth
Century India,” In Richard M. Eaton, Munis D. Faruqui, David Gilmartin and Sunil
Kumar (Eds.), Expanding Frontiers in South Asian andWorld History: Essays in Honour
of John
87
• F. Richards (pp. 1- 38).
Unit- II: This Unit introduces the students to the political process by which Company rules was
established in the Indian subcontinent. The unit shall also acquaint students with the
important features of the 18th century states and how they came to be positioned vis-à-vis
an expanding Company state. (Teaching Time: 6 hrs. approx.)
• Bandyopadhyay, Sekhar. (2004). From Plassey to Partition: A History of Modern India.
New Delhi: Orient Blackswan (Chapter 1, ‘Transition to the Eighteenth Century’, pp.
37- 62).
• Bayly, C. A. (2008). Indian Society and the making of the British Empire. Cambridge:
CUP (Chapter 2, ‘Indian Capital and the Emergence of Colonial Society’ pp. 45- 78;
Chapter 3, ‘The Crisis of the Indian State’, pp. 79- 105).
• Fisher, Michael H. (1996).The Politics of British Annexation of India 1757- 1857.
Oxford: OUP (Introduction).
• Marshall, P.J. (1990). Bengal: The British Bridgehead. Cambridge: CUP.
• Cederlof, Gunnel. (2014). Founding an Empire on India’s North- Eastern Frontiers
1790- 1840: Climate, Commerce, Polity. OUP.
• Farooqui, Amar, (2013), Zafar and The Raj: Anglo- Mughal Delhi c. 1800-1850, Primus
Books, Delhi.
Unit-III: The unit shall discuss in detail and familiarise students with the evolving ideological
underpinnings of the Company state, the idea of difference which developed within the
imperial discourse and the manner in which colonial education policy and system evolved.
(Teaching Time: 6 hrs. approx.)
• Metcalf, Thomas R. (2007 reprint). Ideologies of the Raj, Cambridge: CUP(Chapters 1,2
& 3).
• Wagoner, Phillip B. (October 2003). “Pre- colonial Intellectuals and the Production of
Colonial Knowledge”. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 45 (4), pp. 783- 814.
• Stokes, Eric. (1982 reprint). The English Utilitarians and India. Oxford: OUP (Chapter
‘Doctrine and its Setting’)
• Rocher, Rosanne. (1993). “British Orientalism in the Eighteenth Century: The Dialectics
of Knowledge and Government”, in Peter van der Veer and Carol Breckenridge eds.
Oriental- ism and the Post- colonial Predicament: Perspectives on South Asia.
University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 215-250.
• Viswanathan, Gauri. (2014 reprint). Masks of Conquest: Literary Study and British Rule
in India. New York: Columbia University Press (Introduction and Chapters 1 to 4).
• Copland, Ian. (2007). “The Limits of Hegemony: Elite Responses to Nineteenth-
Century Imperial and Missionary Acculturation Strategies in India”. Comparative
Studies in Society and History. Vol. 49. No. 3. (637- 665).
• Bhattacharya, Sabyasachi (ed.). (1998). The Contested Terrain: Perspectives on
Education in India. New Delhi: Orient Blackswan (“Introduction”).
• Dharampal. The Beautiful Tree: Indigenous Indian Education in the Eighteenth
Century. Vol III, Goa, Other India Press
88
Unit-IV: This Unit shall familiarise students with the key debates on the economic impact of
Company Raj. Students shall assess this impact by looking at changing agrarian relations, crop
cultivation, and handicraft production. (Teaching Time: 9 hrs.approx.)
• Stein, Burton. (ed.). (1992).The Making of Agrarian Policy in British India 1770-1900.
Ox- ford: OUP (Introduction (pp.1-32)& Chapter 4(pp.113-149)).
• Tomlinson, B.R. (2005).The Economy of Modern India 1860-1970. Cambridge: CUP
(Chapter 2, pp.47- 67)
• Bose, Sugata. (Ed.). (1994).Credit, Markets and the Agrarian Economy of Colonial
India. New Delhi: Oxford University Press (Introduction (pp. 1-28) & Chapter 2 (pp. 57-
79)).
• Chandra, Bipan. (1999). “Colonialism, Stages of Colonialism and the Colonial State”,
in- Bipan Chandra, Essays on Colonialism, New Delhi: Orient Longman, pp. 58-78.
• Ray, Indrajit. (2016). “The Myth and Reality of Deindustrialization in Early Modern
India”, in LatikaChaudhary et al. (Eds.) A New Economic History of Colonial India. New
York: Routledge. (52- 66).
• Sumit Sarkar (2014) Modern Times, India 1880s – 1950s, Permanent Black, New Delhi.
Chapters 3 & 4
• Shrivastava, Sharmila, Slopes of struggle: Coffee on Baba Budan hills, Indian Economic
and Social History Review, Volume LVII, Number 2, (April – June 2020) pp. 199 - 228
Unit-V: This Unit shall acquaint students with the social churning on questions of tradition,
modernity, reform, etc. that unfolded during first century of British colonialrule. Through
special focus on gender concerns, gender roles in the household and ideas of ‘ideal
womanhood’, the unit shall enable students to contextualize theendeavours of nineteenth-
century social reformers and nationalists. (Teaching Time: 9 hrs. approx.)
• Jones, Kenneth. (2003). Socio-Religious Reform Movements in British India(pp. 15-
47; pp. 122- 131).
• Joshi, V.C. (ed.). (1975).Rammohun Roy and the Process of Modernization in India.
Vikas Publishing House (essays by A.K. Majumdar and Sumit Sarkar).
• Singh, Hulas. (2015). Rise of Reason: Intellectual History of 19th-century Maharashtra.
Taylor and Francis (pp. 1- 197).
• Sarkar, Sumit and Tanika Sarkar (eds.).(2008). Women and Social Reform in India: A
Reader. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press (Chapters 1, 2 and 4).
• Loomba, Ania. (Autumn 1993). “Dead Women Tell No Tales: Issues of Female
Subjectivity, Subaltern Agency and Tradition in Colonial and Post- Colonial Writings on
Widow Immola- tion in India”.History Workshop, 36, pp.209–227.
• Kopf, David. (1969). British Orientalism and the Bengal Renaissance: The Dynamics of
Modernization. Berkeley, Los Angeles: University of California Press (Introduction).
89
• Panikkar, K.N. (1995). Culture, Ideology, Hegemony: Intellectuals
and Social Consciousness in Colonial India. New Delhi:
Tulika(pp. 1-26 & pp. 47-53).
• Chakravarti, Uma. (1998). Rewriting History: The Life and Times of Pandita Ramabai.
New Delhi: Kali for Women (Chapter, ‘Caste, Gender and the State in Eighteenth
Century Maha- rashtra’, pp. 3-42).
Unit-VI: This Unit shall enable students to identify and discuss the issues reflected in the
major uprisings of the nineteenth century. In the context of heavy revenue assessment,
changing land rights, deepening stratification within the rural society, emergence of new
social forces in agrarian economy, etc., students shall discuss the discontent of the landed
elite, and those of struggling peasants and tribals during theCompany Raj. (Teaching Time: 6
hrs. approx.)
• Stokes, Eric and C.A. Bayly. (1986). The Peasant Armed: the Indian Revolt of1857.
Claren- don Press (Introduction).
• Mukherjee, Rudrangshu. (1993). “The Sepoy Mutinies Revisited”, in MushirulHasan
and
• Narayani Gupta (Eds.), India’s Colonial Encounter, New Delhi: Manohar
• David, Saul. (2010). “Greased Cartridges and the Great Mutiny of 1857: A Pretext to
Rebel or the Final Straw”, In Kaushik Roy (ed.)War and Society in Colonial India(82-
113).
• Hardiman, David. (1993). Peasant Resistance in India, 1858- 1914. New Delhi: OUP.
Introduction & pp. 1-125.
• Desai, A.R. (ed.) (1979). Peasant Struggles in India. Bombay: UP.(136- 158)
• Mukherjee, Rudrangshu. (1984) Awadh in Revolt 1857-1858. New Delhi: Oxford
University Press.
90
• Green, William A. et al.(Spring 1985). “Unifying Themes in the History ofBritish India,
1757-1857: An Historiographical Analysis”Albion: A QuarterlyJournal Concerned with
British Studies, 17 (1), pp. 15-45. [pp. 20-24 is a surveyof British strategy/calculations
during its territorial expansion]
• Guha, Ranajit.(1983) Elementary Aspects of Peasant Insurgency in Colonial India. New
Delhi: Oxford University Press (Introduction & Chapter ‘Territoriality’).
• Hutchins, Francis. (1967). The Illusion of Permanence. Princeton, New Jersey:
Princeton University Press.
• Jones, Kenneth. (2003)Socio-Religious Reform Movements in British India. New
Cambridge
• History of India, Vol.3.1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Kapila, Shruti ed. (2010). An Intellectual History for India.Delhi: Cambridge University
Press.
• Ludden, David ed. (2005). Agricultural Production and South Asian History. New Delhi:
Oxford University Press.
• Metcalf, Thomas. (1995). Ideologies of the Raj. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press (Chapter 4, Ordering Difference, pp. 92-.128).
• Mukherjee, Mithi. (2010) India in the Shadows of Empire: A Legal and Political History
1774- 1950. New Delhi: Oxford University Press (Introduction and Chapter 1, ‘The
Colonial and the Imperial’, pp. 1- 44).
• Mukherjee, Rudrangshu. (2018). “The Azimgarh Proclamation and Some Questions on
the Revolt of 1857 in the North western Provinces”. The Year of Blood: Essays on the
Revolt of 1857. New Delhi: Social Science Press and Routledge.
• Pollock, Sheldon ed. (2011). Forms of Knowledge in Early Modern Asia. Delhi:
Manohar. Introduction (1- 16).
• Parthasarathi, Prasannan. (2001). The Transition to a Colonial Economy: Weavers,
Mer- chants and Kings in South India, 1720-1800. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
• Raj, K N. et al ed. (1985). Essays on the Commercialization of Indian Agriculture. New
Delhi: Oxford University Press.
• Robb, Peter, ed. (1993). Dalit movements and the meanings of labour in India. New
Delhi: Oxford University Press.
• Roy, Tirthankar. (2010). Company of Kinsmen: Enterprise and Community in South
Asian History 1700-1940. New Delhi: OUP (Chapter 6, pp. 190- 219).
• Skuy, David. (July 1998). “Macaulay and the Indian Penal Code of 1862: The Myth of
the Inherent Superiority and Modernity of the English Legal System Compared to
India's Legal System in the Nineteenth Century”, Modern Asian Studies, 32 (3), pp.
513-557.
• Stein, Burton (ed.) (1992). The Making of Agrarian Policy in British India, 1770-1900.
Delhi: Oxford University Press.
• Stern, Phillip. (2011). The Company-State: Corporate Sovereignty and the Early
Modern Foundations of the British Empire in India. New York: Oxford University Press.
91
• Stokes, Eric. (1986). The Peasant Armed: The Indian Rebellion of 1857 InC.A. Bayly
(ed.). New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
• Tilak, Lakshmibai. (2017, 1973). Smritichitre: The Memoirs of a Spirited Wife. New
Delhi: Speaking Tiger. (Translated by Shanta Gokhale).
• Rosanne Rocher, “British Orientalism in the Eighteenth century: The Dialectics of
Know-
• ledge and Government”, in Peter van der Veer and Carol Breckenridge eds.
Orientalism and the Postcolonial Predicament: Perspectives on South Asia, University
of Pennsylvania Press, 1993.
• Books in Hindi:
• Bandyopadhyay, Sekhar, (2007), Plassey se vibhajan tak aur uske baad, Orient
Blackswan, New Delhi
• Shukla, R. L. (ed). Adhunik Bharat Ka Itihas, Hindi Madhyam KaryanvayanNideshalay,
Delhi University
• Bipan Chandra, Mridula Mukherjee, Aditya Mukherjee, K. N. Panikkar, Sucheta
Mahajan, Bharat ka Swatantrata Sangharsh Hindi Madhyam Karyanvayan Nideshalay,
Delhi University
• Sumit Sarkar, Adhunik Bharat (1885 – 1947) Rajkamal Prakashan
• Sumit Sarkar, Adhunik Kaal (1880 – 1950), Rajkamal Prakashan
• Bipan Chandra, Adhunik Bharat Ka Itihas, Orient Blackswan
• Bipan Chandra, Adhunik Bharat Mein Upniveshvad aur Rashtravad, Medha
Publishing House
• B. L. Grover, Alka Mehta, Yashpal, Adhunik Bharat Ka Itihas, S. Chand
• Lakshami Subramanian, Bharat Ka Itihas: 1707 – 1857, Orient Blackswan
92
DISCIPLINE SPECIFIC CORE COURSE– 3 (DSC-3): History of Modern Europe – I
Course title & Code Credits Credit distribution of the course Eligibility Pre-requisite of
Lecture Tutorial Practical/ criteria the course
Practice (if any)
History of Modern 4 3 1 0 12 th Pass Nil
Europe – I
Learning Objectives
This paper shall provide a critical overview of the French Revolution, and acquaint the students
with the repercussions of the revolution, both within and beyond France. It shallalso trace the
patterns and outcomes of social upheaval throughout Europe in the first half of the 19th century.
The debates on the development and impact of industrialcapitalism shall be discussed. The birth
of new social movements, political ideas and structures shall be contextualised within developing
capitalism of the nineteenth century.
Learning outcomes
On completing this course, the students will be able to:
• Identify what is meant by the French Revolution.
• Trace short-term and long-term repercussions of revolutionary regimes andEmpire-
building by France.
• Explain features of revolutionary actions and reactionary politics of threatened
monarchical regimes.
• Delineate diverse patterns of industrialization in Europe and assess the socialimpact of
capitalist industrialization.
• Analyse patterns of resistance to industrial capital and the emerging politicalassertions
by new social classes.
SYLLABUS OF DSC-3
93
1. First French empire and monarchical consolidation
2. Revolutions 1830s-1850s
Unit III: Industrial Revolution and Social Transformation (the 19th century)
1. Experience of Industrialisation France, Germany and Eastern / SouthernEurope
2. Impact of the Industrial Revolution: Work, Family and Gender
Essential/recommended readings
Unit 1: In this rubric the students would have learnt about the origins of the French Revolution
and political transformation in late eighteenth century France. They would have explored
various themes linking the phases of the revolution with various key developments during
the revolutionary years, transformation of institutions and social relations. (Teaching time:
15 hrs. approx.)
• McPhee, Peter. (2002).The French Revolution 1789-1799. New York: Oxford University
Press (Chs.1 -- 9) E book by Peter Mc. Phee
• Campbell, Peter R. (Ed.).(2006). The Origins of the Revolution. New York: Palgrave
Macmillan, pp. 1-34, 139-159 (Introduction and Ch.5).
• Rude, George (2000).Revolutionary Europe1783-1815. Somerset, New Jersey, U.S.A.:
Wiley-Blackwell (Ch.1).
• Furet, Francois, (1988). The French Revolution 1770-1814. Oxford: Blackwell, pp.3-100
and 211-66.
• Landes, Joan B. (1988). Women and the Public Sphere in the Age of the French
Revolution. Ithaca, London: Cornell University Press,
• Darnton, Robert. (1996). “What was Revolutionary About the French Revolution.” in
Peter Jones, (Ed.).The French Revolution in Social and Political Perspective. London:
Edward Arnold, pp. 18-29.
• Kates, Gary. (Ed.).(1998).The French Revolution: Recent debates and Controver- sies.
London and New York: Routledge.
• Frey, Linda S. and Marsha S. Frey.(2004). The French Revolution, Westport, CT:
Greenwood Press, pp. 37-46 (“A New Political Culture”).
• Kennedy, Emmet. (1989).A Cultural History of the French Revolution. New Haven and
London: Yale University Press. Chapter 9
94
• Hunt, Lynn.(2004).Politics, Culture, and Class in the French Revolution. Oakland:
University of California Press.
• Hunt, Lynn.(1989). “Introduction: The French Revolution in Culture, New Ap- proaches
and Perspectives.”Eighteenth-Century Studies 22(3), Special Issue: The French
Revolution in Culture, Spring.
• लालबहाि◌ रवम◌ाि◌ ।यर◌ू ◌ोपक◌ाइर◌्ह◌ास: फ◌ ् ◌ास◌ीस◌ं ◌ीक्र◌ार◌्◌ं स◌े रि◌◌् र्◌ीय रव् तय◌ुद्धकर् ।
• पा�थस◌ा�र� ग◌ुपर् ◌् ा (संप◌ाि◌ क)। यर◌ू ◌ोप क◌ा इर◌्ह ◌ास। Hindi Madhyam Karyanvaya
Nideshalaya, DU.
At the end of this rubric students would have developed an understanding of the significant
transformations in European polity and society till the mid nineteenth century. They would
have studied about the establishment of Napoleonic Empire, its impact on France and Europe.
They would have read about the consolidation of monarchical power and about events
leading up to the revolutions 1848. (Teaching time: 6 hrs. approx.)
• Grabb, Alexander.(2003).Napoleon and the Transformation of Europe. NewYork:
Palgrave Macmillan (Ch. 2 &Ch.3).
• Lyons, Martin. (2006).Post-Revolutionary Europe, 1815-1856, New York:Palgrave
Macmillan.
• Price, Roger (1988).The Revolutions of 1848. London: Macmillan.
• David Thomson, Europe since Napoleon, 1957, Part-II Chapter 6 and 7
• Sperber, Jonathan (2005). The European Revolutions, 1848-1851. Cambridge:Cam-
bridge University Press.
• लाल बहाि◌ र वमाि◌ । यरू ◌ोप का इहार्स: फ् ◌ासीसं ◌ी क्रार्ं से �र् र्◌ीय वर्त युद्ध कर्।
• पा�थसा�र� गुप्र ्◌ा (संपाि◌ क)। यरू ◌ोप का इहार्स। Hindi Madhyam Karyanvaya
Nideshalaya, DU.
Unit III: In this Unit the student would learn about the social and economic changesin
Europe during the nineteenth century. The student would be expected to develop on
her/his understand- ing of the social and economic dimensions of the Industrial
revolution in eighteenth century Britain to compare and understand the specific case
studies of France, Germany and Russia in the nineteenth century. (Teaching time: 9
hrs. approx.)
• Stearns, Peter N.(2013).The Industrial Revolution in World History. Boulder: West-
view Press.
• Trebilcock, Clive. (2000). “Industrialization of Modern Europe 1750-1914.” in
T.C.W. Blanning (Ed.).The Oxford History of Modern Europe. Oxford: OxfordUni-
versity Press, pp. 46-75.
• Cameron, Rondo. (1985). “A New View of European Industrialization.”Economic
History Review 38 (1), pp. 1-23.
• Beaudoin, Steven M.(2003).The Industrial Revolution. Boston, New York:Houghton
Mifflin Company (Ch.4 & Ch.5)
• Simonton, Deborah. (1998).The Routledge History of Women in Europe since1700,
London and New York: Routledge, pp.134-176 (Ch.5).
• Louise Tilly and Joan Scott, Women, Work and Family, 1978 Routledge,London and
New York
95
• Tom Kemp, Industrialisation in Nineteenth Century Europe, 1974, Routledge
• लाल बहाि◌ र वमाि◌ । यरू ◌ोप का इहार्स: फ् ◌ासीसं ◌ी क्रार्ं से �र् र्◌ीय वर्त यद्
ु ध कर्।
• पा�थसा�र� गुप्र ्◌ा (संपाि◌ क)। यरू ◌ोप का इहर् Nideshalaya, DU. ◌ास। Hindi Madhyam Karyanvaya
• �र् वेश वजय, मीना भारराज, वंि◌ ना चौधर� (संपाि◌ क)। आधर ◌ु नक यरू ◌ोप का इहार्स: आयाम और
�र् शाएं। Hindi Madhyam Karyanvaya Nideshalaya, DU
Unit IV: At the end of this rubric the student will be expected to demonstrate an
understanding of the transformations of the political systems in nineteenth century Europe.
Taking up the case study of nineteenth century Britain the student will study the development
of parliamentary institutions alongside a new politically assertive working class. The student
will also be expected to bring together her/his understanding of the economic and political
transformations in this period when exploring the emergence of socialist thought and critique
of capitalism. (Teaching time: 9 hrs. approx.)
• Lang, Sean (2005).Parliamentary Reform, 1785-1928. London and New York:
Routledge.
• Willis, Michael. (1999). Democracy and the State, 1830-1945.Cambridge: Cam-bridge
University Press.
• Walton, John K.(1999).Chartism, London and New York: Routledge.
• Geary, Dick (1981).European Labour Protest 1848-1939. London: Croom Helm
London
• Kolakowski, Leszec. (1978).Main Currents of Marxism. Volume I. Oxford:Claren-
don Press.
• Lichthem, George. (1970). A Short History of Socialism. London: Weidenfieldand
Nicolson.
• Joll, James. (1990).Europe Since1870.New York: Penguin Books, pp. 49-77
• लालबहाि◌ रवम◌ाि◌ ।यर◌ू ◌ोपक◌ाइर◌्ह◌ास: फ◌ ् ◌ास◌ीस◌ं ◌ीक्र◌ार◌्◌ं स◌े रि◌◌् र्◌ीय र्वत य◌ुद्धकर् ।
• पा�थस◌ा�र� ग◌ुपर् ◌् ा (संप◌ाि◌ क)। यर◌ू ◌ोप क◌ा इर◌्ह ◌ास। Hindi Madhyam Karyanvaya
Nideshalaya, DU.
• रि◌◌् व◌ेशवज य, मीन◌ा भारर◌ाज, वंि◌ न◌ा चौधर◌ी (संप◌ाि◌ क)। आधर ◌ु नक यर◌ू ◌ोप का
Unit V: Culture and Society: 1789-1850s: Approx. In this Unit the student will be expected to
link various themes from the earlier rubrics and develop an understanding of the cultural,
artistic and urban transformations in nineteenth century Europe. The student will be
expected to develop a competent understanding of the emergence of new art forms,
reformation of various art and cultural academies, the developing notions of consumption of
culture and the changing patterns of urbanism. (Teaching time: 6 hrs. approx.)
• Blanning, T.C.W. (2000). “The Commercialization and Sacralization of European
Culture in the Nineteenth Century.” in T.C.W. Blanning, (ed.).The Oxford History of
Modern Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 101- 125 &126-152.
• Blanning, T.C.W. (2010). The Romantic Revolution: A History. London: George
Weidenfeld & Nicholson.
• Blanning, T.C.W. (ed.) (2000). Nineteenth Century Europe, Short Oxford History of
Europe, Oxford: Oxford University Press (Chapter 4)
96
• Schneider, Joan, (2007) The Age of Romanticism, Greenwood Guides to Historical
Events 1500-1900, Greenwood Press, London
• Lees, Andrew and Lynn Hollen Lees.(2007).Cities and the Making of Modern Europe
1750-1914. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• लालबहाि◌ रवम◌ाि◌ ।यर◌ू ◌ोपक◌ाइर◌्ह◌ास: फ◌ ् ◌ास◌ीस◌ं ◌ीक्रार◌ं् स◌े रि◌◌् र्◌ीय रव् तय◌ुद्धकर् ।
• पा�थस◌ा�र� ग◌ुपर् ◌् ा (संप◌ाि◌ क)। यर◌ू ◌ोप क◌ा इर◌्ह ◌ास। Hindi Madhyam Karyanvaya
Nideshalaya, DU.
• रि◌◌् व◌ेशवज
य, मीन◌ा भारर◌ाज, वंि◌ न◌ा चौधर◌ी (संप◌ाि◌ क)। आधर◌ु नक यर◌ू ◌ोप का इहार्स: आयाम और �र् शाएं। Hindi Madhyam Karyanvaya Nideshalaya,
DU
97
DISCIPLINE SPECIFIC ELECTIVE COURSE– 2 (DSE): History of Africa c. 1500 – 1960s
Course title & Code Credits Credit distribution of the course Eligibility Pre-requisite of
Lecture Tutorial Practical/ criteria the course
Practice (if any)
History of Africa c. 4 3 1 0 12th Pass NIL
1500 – 1960s
Learning Objectives
This paper offers a historical overview of the African continent. It traces major long-term
continuities and changes in Africa’s socio-economic structures, cultural life and political formations
from the 16th century to the mid-twentieth century. The paper closely examines colonial trade
and rule, as well as anti-colonial resistance. It offers a critical analysis of the immediate post-
independence years, and situates the specific positioning of Africa in connected histories of a
globalizing world.
Learning outcomes
On completion of this course the student shall be able to
• Critique stereotypes on the African continent and outline major shifts in African history.
• Explain elements of change and continuity in the African political experience, political
regimes and national formations, economy, society and cultural milieu from the 16th to
20th centuries.
• Contextualize the impact of colonialism on the African continent.
• Explain social protest and anti-colonial resistance in Africa, as well as practices of
‘transculturation’.
• Discuss the dilemmas and contradictions emerging from the post-independence economic,
social, political and cultural milieu.
SYLLABUS OF DSE
Unit I: Historiographies on Africa: Development of historiography on Africa and abrief
survey of pre-15th century cultures and civilizations.
Unit II: Africa and World: Trade Relations from 15th century to 19th century:Economy,
society and state in Africa from the end of the 15th to 19th centuries.
107
Unit III: Colonization of Africa: Atlantic Slave trade; Africa’s contribution to the development
of European capitalism.
Unit IV: Movements against Slave Trade and Slave Autobiographies: the end of the slave
trade, and the shift to ‘Legitimate Commerce’ and ‘Informal Empire’.
Unit VI: Negritude, Diaspora and Independence Movement: Various forms of protest and
National Liberation Movements century to 1939; peasant and worker protests, popular
culture, gender and ethnicity.
Essential/recommended readings
Unit I: This unit deals with Development of historiography on Africa and a brief survey of pre-
15thcentury cultures and civilizations in Africa. (Teaching time: 6 hrs. approx.)
• Manning, P., (2013). ‘African and World Historiography’, Journal of African
History, Vol. 54, No.3, pp. 319-30. London: Cambridge University Press.
• Mazrui, A.A., (Ed.). (1993). UNESCO General History of Africa: Africa Since1935
Vol. VIII. London: Heinemann.
• Fanon, F.(1963). The Wretched of the Earth. New York: Grove Press.
• Rediker, M., (2007). The Slave Ship: A Human History. New York: Viking.
• Ischie, E., (1997). A History of African Societies upto 1870. London: Cambridge
University press.
Unit-II: This unit will deal with Africa and World, trading relations from the end ofthe
fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries. It would also examine the nature of economy, society
and state in Africa. (Teaching time: 9 hrs. approx.)
• Rodney, W. (1972). How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. London: Bogle- L’Ouver- ture
Publications.
• Williams, E. (1944). Capitalism and Slavery. University of North Carolina Press.
• Sparks, A. (1991). The Mind of South Africa: The Story of the Rise and Fall of Apartheid.
• New York: Ballantine Books.
Unit III: This unit examines the colonization of Africa, the history of Africa in the Atlantic world
with specific reference to slaves, slave-ships, piracy and slave
108
rebellions. It also elaborates upon Africa’s contribution to the development of European
capitalism. (Teaching time: 6 hrs. approx.)
• Williams, E. (1944). Capitalism and Slavery. University of North Carolina Press.
• Austen, R. (1987). African Economic History. London: Heinemann.
• Reid, R. J. (2012). A History of Modern Africa: 1800 to the Present. Hoboken:Wi-
ley Blackwell.
Unit-IV: This unit deals with the movements against slave trade leading to its endand the
shift to ‘Legitimate Commerce’ and ‘Informal Empire’ from 1800 onwards. It also familiarizes
students about the experience of the native Africans through the slave autobiographies.
(Teaching time: 6 hrs. approx.)
• Williams, E. (1944). Capitalism and Slavery. University of North Carolina Press.
• Freund, B. (1988). The African Worker. Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress.
• Vansina, J. (1990). Paths in the Rainforests: Towards a History of PoliticalTradi-
tion in Equatorial Africa. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press.
• Douglass, F., (1995). Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an AmericanSlave.
Bostan: Dover Publications.
Unit V: This unit deals with the history of Imperialism and the historical roots and meaning of
Apartheid in South Africa and the struggle against it. It also deals with themaking of colonial
economies in Sub-Saharan Africa towards the end of the 19th century. (Teaching time: 9 hrs.
approx.)
• Ahmida, A.A. (Ed.). (2000). Beyond Colonialism and Nationalism in theMaghrib:
History, Culture, Politics. London: Palgrave.
• Vansina, J. (1990). Paths in the Rainforests: Towards a History of PoliticalTradi-
• tion in Equatorial Africa. Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press.
• Davidson, B. (1978). Africa in Modern History: The Search for a New Society.Lon-
don: Allen Lane.
• Ross, R. (1999). A Concise History of South Africa. Cambridge: CambridgeUniver- sity
Press.
• Ruedy, J. Modern Algeria: The Origins and Development of a Nation.
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2005.
• Stora, B. Algeria, 1830-2000: A Short History. (2001). Ithaca: Cornell UniversityPress,
2001.
• Thompson, L. A History of South Africa. (2000). New Haven and London: Yale
University Press.
Unit-VI: This unit traces the history of various forms of protest and national liberation
movements’ upto 1939; peasant and worker protests, popular culture, gender and ethnicity.
It also examines Worker protests, peasant rebellions and National Liberation Movements in
Africa. (Teaching time: 9 hrs. approx.)
• Crummy, D. (Ed.). (1986). Banditry, Rebellion and Social Protest in Africa. Lon- don:
Heinemann.
109
• Sueur, J.L. (Ed.). The Decolonization Reader. Abingdon: Psychology Press, 2003.
• Freund, B. (1988). The Making of Contemporary Africa. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Suggested Readings:
• Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D., (1985). African Historiographies: What history for
Which Africa? London: Sage Publications.
• Memmi, A. (1991). The Colonizer and the Colonized. Boston: Beacon Press.
• Owen, R., and Bob Sutcliffe. (Eds.). (1972). Studies in the Theory of Imperialism.
London: Longman Publishing Group, 1972.
• Robinson, D., and Douglas Smith. (Eds.). (1979). Sources of the African Past: Case
Studies of Five Nineteenth-Century African Societies. London:Heinemann.
• Bennoune, M. (1988). The Making of Contemporary Algeria: Colonial Upheavals and
Post-Independence Development. Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press.
• Callinicos, L. (1995). A People’s History of South Africa: Gold and Workers 1886-
1924,Volume1. Johannesburg: Ravan Press Ltd.
• Callinicos, L. (1987). A People’s History of South Africa: Working Life 1886- 1940,
• Volume 2. Johannesburg: Ravan Press Ltd.
• Callinicos, L. (1993). A People’s History of South Africa: A Place in the City, Vol-ume 3.
Johannesburg: Ravan Press Ltd.
• Du bois, W.E.B. (1979) The World and Africa: An Inquiry into the part which Africa has
played in World History. New York: International Publishers.
• Rediker, M. (2014). Outlaws of the Atlantic: Sailors, Pirates and Motley Crews in the
Age of Sail. Boston: Beacon Press.
• Inikori, J.E. (2002). Africans and the Industrial Revolution in England: A Study in
International Trade and Economic Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
• Equiano, Olaudah., (1789). The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano,
or Gustavus Vassa, the African. London : T. Wilkins, etc.
• Asanti, Molefi K., (2019). The History of Africa: The Quest for Eternal Harmony.
Routledge.
• Collins, Robert O. and Iyob, R. (Eds.). (2015). The Problems in African History: The
Precolonial Centuries. Markus Wiener Publishers.
Note: Examination scheme and mode shall be as prescribed by the Examination Branch,
University of Delhi, from time to time.
110