This is an excellent collection of essays delving into a tumultuous decade in the history of Calcutta – the 1940-50 period – which encapsulated within its tiny folds, momentous events ranging from anti-colonial struggles to a devastating famine, from a communal holocaust to the birth of two new states. The writers narrate how during the brief span, the city went through traumatic – as well as invigorating – socio-economic and cultural changes that other cities in history, in the normal course, had experienced through gradual stages over several decades, or even centuries.
Sumanta Banerjee
Political commentator and researcher in social history,
Dehradun
Calcutta: The Stormy Decades edited by two of India’s finest historians put together essays on the city’s history and culture in the 1940s, a decade that made and unmade Calcutta. This book fills an important gap in Indian historiography. What is also worth noting is that many of the contributors are young scholars. It also has some translations from Bengali by Sumit Sarkar, who needs no introduction to students of modern India. This is a rich volume which I strongly recommend.
Rudrangshu Mukherjee
Vice-Chancellor and Professor of History,
Ashoka University