Since  its first publication in 2004, From  Plassey to Partition has come to be regarded as an authoritative history of  modern India. And this enlarged edition offers a perceptive analysis of India’s  efforts towards modernisation and democratisation since Independence.
    The book addresses  important historiographical questions by taking cognisance of emergent  perspectives adopted by social science scholarship over the last twenty-five  years. As a major work of our times, it engages in though-provoking debates on  issues like political economy of eighteenth-century India, socio-religious  reform and revival, and the nationalist movement.
    The newly added  concluding chapter provides a succinct account of major developments in  postcolonial India during the Nehruvian and subsequent years. It links  contemporary debates about Indian nationhood with changes in society, economy  and polity, from the years of state-directed planning under a one-party system  to the emergence of a market economy in an era of predominantly coalition  governments.
    Capturing inimitably  the rhythms of India’s polyphonic nationalism, this book will be indispensable  for students of history and political science. Scholars and researchers will  benefit from its detailed and extensive bibliography. And it will guide general  readers to an understanding of contemporary India.