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REVOLUTIONARIES ON TRIAL : sedition, betrayal, and martyrdom.

By: Publication details: [S.l.] : ALEPH BOOK COMPANY, 2024.Description: xxxv, 442 pagesISBN:
  • 9390652308
  • 9789390652303
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 954.035 23
LOC classification:
  • DS479 .V35 2024
Contents:
Timeline; List of Characters; Introduction; 1. The Plot Unravels: A Murder, a Bombing, and Forensic Science; 2. The Merry Bedfellows: Conspiracy, Sedition, and Violence; 3. The Tale of Three Sedition Trials; 4. The Many Betrayals; 5. Atonement and Redemption; 6. The Court as Theatre of War; 7. Revolutionaries as Political Prisoners; 8. The Press and the Publics; Conclusion; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Image Credits; Notes; Bibliography; Index.
Summary: Revolutionaries on Trial is a groundbreaking new study of the infamous Lahore Conspiracy Case and its principal martyrs—Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru—who belonged to the Hindustan Socialist Republican Army (HSRA). The trial was named after the city of Lahore where it was booked and held from 23 July 1929 onwards in Lahore Central Jail. On 7 October 1930, the judge pronounced the young men guilty of conspiring and waging a war against the British crown. Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru, whom the Indian public believed to be innocent at the time, were sentenced to be hanged and others received varying jail sentences. The history of the Lahore Trial has so far been told as one of miscarriage of justice and the colonial state’s lack of commitment or failure to uphold the ideology of rule of law. However, Revolutionaries on Trial shows that this is, at best, just part of the story of one of the most important events of the struggle for Independence. To set the record straight, the book widens the scope of historical enquiry by examining the elaborate performances of four sets of actors—the colonial state as the plaintiff, the revolutionaries as the defendants, witnesses for the prosecution, and the Indian press and public as spectators—each with their own motivations, aspirations, and a view of the desired outcome of the trial. It further captures the extraordinary canvas of the trial which was staged not just in a courtroom but across multiple sites—offices of the investigation officers, legislative assembly, government offices, jails, courtroom, streets, printing presses, newspaper establishments, coffee houses, meeting rooms, and universities across North India. Even as the book examines the history of the dramatic trial, it asks new questions: why did the colonial state bother to put the revolutionaries on trial despite the vast repertoire of violence at its disposal? What more was there to the revolutionaries’ trial strategy other than using the process for propaganda? Is it possible to write a history of nationalism that incorporates acts of collaboration (e.g., spying, informing, perfidy, and denunciation) without the implicit moral judgment and destructive potential embodied in such acts? In what way did the trial shift the public perception about the revolutionaries, if at all? Lucidly written and grounded in impeccable scholarship, historian Aparna Vaidik brings to vivid life the people and events of a trial that left an indelible imprint on the history of nationalism and revolution in India.
List(s) this item appears in: New Arrivals for 2024-25
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Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Materials specified Status Notes Barcode
BOOKs National Law School General Stacks 954.035 VAI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) HB Available Recommended by Dr. Manpreet Singh Dillon 39888

Timeline;
List of Characters;
Introduction;
1. The Plot Unravels: A Murder, a Bombing, and Forensic Science;
2. The Merry Bedfellows: Conspiracy, Sedition, and Violence;
3. The Tale of Three Sedition Trials;
4. The Many Betrayals;
5. Atonement and Redemption;
6. The Court as Theatre of War;
7. Revolutionaries as Political Prisoners;
8. The Press and the Publics;
Conclusion;
Acknowledgements;
Abbreviations;
Image Credits;
Notes;
Bibliography;
Index.

Revolutionaries on Trial is a groundbreaking new study of the infamous Lahore Conspiracy Case and its principal martyrs—Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru—who belonged to the Hindustan Socialist Republican Army (HSRA). The trial was named after the city of Lahore where it was booked and held from 23 July 1929 onwards in Lahore Central Jail. On 7 October 1930, the judge pronounced the young men guilty of conspiring and waging a war against the British crown. Bhagat Singh, Sukhdev, and Rajguru, whom the Indian public believed to be innocent at the time, were sentenced to be hanged and others received varying jail sentences.
The history of the Lahore Trial has so far been told as one of miscarriage of justice and the colonial state’s lack of commitment or failure to uphold the ideology of rule of law. However, Revolutionaries on Trial shows that this is, at best, just part of the story of one of the most important events of the struggle for Independence. To set the record straight, the book widens the scope of historical enquiry by examining the elaborate performances of four sets of actors—the colonial state as the plaintiff, the revolutionaries as the defendants, witnesses for the prosecution, and the Indian press and public as spectators—each with their own motivations, aspirations, and a view of the desired outcome of the trial. It further captures the extraordinary canvas of the trial which was staged not just in a courtroom but across multiple sites—offices of the investigation officers, legislative assembly, government offices, jails, courtroom, streets, printing presses, newspaper establishments, coffee houses, meeting rooms, and universities across North India.
Even as the book examines the history of the dramatic trial, it asks new questions: why did the colonial state bother to put the revolutionaries on trial despite the vast repertoire of violence at its disposal? What more was there to the revolutionaries’ trial strategy other than using the process for propaganda? Is it possible to write a history of nationalism that incorporates acts of collaboration (e.g., spying, informing, perfidy, and denunciation) without the implicit moral judgment and destructive potential embodied in such acts? In what way did the trial shift the public perception about the revolutionaries, if at all?
Lucidly written and grounded in impeccable scholarship, historian Aparna Vaidik brings to vivid life the people and events of a trial that left an indelible imprint on the history of nationalism and revolution in India.

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