India Book Review: A New History of India, by Stanley Wolpert
on Richard Johnson (India), 14/Apr/2010 08:05, 34 days ago
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Reading UCLA historian Stanley Wolpert’sA New History of India (8th ed.)is your (and my) just punishment for not taking an Intro to India course at university.And reading the dense volumepassimin 35-minute intervals on theTTC* during a typically bleak Canadian February (as I did) might be the best way to approach the book (and might actually make winter look not too difficult by comparison).To be fair, Wolpert’s history of India, now in its eighth edition (the academic equivalent of the best-seller list and the Oprah book club, combined), offers you infinitely more insight and considerably more depth than those forgettable history passages in Lonely Planet.From theVedic civilization’s economic development to agricultural innovation on theDeccan plateau; from Hindu philosophy to theDutch East India Company; fromMughalascendancy to English utilitarianism to the political context of theassassination of Gandhi—actually of several Gandhis—Wolpert has you covered with agonizingly precise historical minutiae of the sort that usually attracts only lonely history buffs and comatose hospital patients (the latter in book-on-tape form, obviously).Still, it is patently irresponsible to attempt to travel India without some concept of its history, and although there are more enjoyable ways to devour it, there is no more complete way (possibly short of enrolling in Wolpert’s class). Read it before you travel but carry it along at your own risk; while it is a sure-footed reference guide, it is not a light book!A New History of India(8th ed.)By Stanley WolpertOxford University Press, 2009548 pages* TTC equals Toronto Transit Commission, or more specifically the Dundas and Spadina streetcars for this blogger.