1991
DOI: 10.1017/s0026749x00013925
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‘The Habitual Nobility of Being’: British Officers and the Social Construction of the Bengal Army in the Early Nineteenth Century

Abstract: The ethnocentric and racialist overtones of the Victorian empire have long been acknowledged. Most work in this field has generally centred on the mid to late nineteenth century and, by emphasizing the intellectual and cultural currents in domestic society, has focused our attention on the metropole. This reveals only part of the equation; British attitudes towards the outside world arose from a complex matrix of ideas, assumptions and contacts that linked the metropole and colonial environments. In order to u… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…These three communities came from Awadh, Bihar, and Rohilkhand. 65 S. P. Rosen writes that Indian society was divided by caste structure, and argues that a divided society generates an army with low military effectiveness. Unlike the Indian princes, the EIC constructed a colonial army that distanced itself from the caste-ridden Indian society.…”
Section: Military Manpower Mobilization By the Eicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These three communities came from Awadh, Bihar, and Rohilkhand. 65 S. P. Rosen writes that Indian society was divided by caste structure, and argues that a divided society generates an army with low military effectiveness. Unlike the Indian princes, the EIC constructed a colonial army that distanced itself from the caste-ridden Indian society.…”
Section: Military Manpower Mobilization By the Eicmentioning
confidence: 99%