Abstract
Using the term “legacy” for a career as productive, insightful, and pathbreaking as Chris Bayly's is doubtless an understatement. The movement in his publications from the transitional world in the Indian subcontinent leading to British imperialism, through aspects of high empire in India, to world history through both case studies and broader context for grasping the implications of a changing world, provides valuable analyses for all of us, if not a pattern many could replicate. Perhaps what ought to be noted here is the experience, common to many of us working across a very broad range of problematics and focal points, to have found Bayly there, before us.
conceptual design, consumption, dialogic processes, fragmentation, fundamental interconnections, identity narratives, India, local agency, twentieth-century ruptures
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2019
2019
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