Margins and Heartlands
MTA
Comparative Regional Histories of the Deccan, South India, Bengal, and Punjab
*Margins and Heartlands* offers a comparative historical analysis of four major South Asian regions—the Deccan, South India, Bengal, and Punjab—challenging the traditional "center-periphery" national narrative. By examining these areas from antiquity to the post-1947 era, the book demonstrates how distinct geographical foundations, such as the basaltic plateaus of the Deccan and the amphibious deltas of Bengal, dictated unique agrarian regimes and political ecologies. These regional specificities influenced the rise of diverse state forms, from the temple-centered sacred economies of the South to the martial agrarian heartland of Punjab, ensuring that each region developed a distinct historical trajectory that cannot be reduced to a single monolithic "Indian" story.
The book traces how these regional identities were further solidified through linguistic evolution and the role of local intermediaries like *zamindars* and *nayakas*, who negotiated power between the village and the empire. During the colonial era, British efforts to reorder the subcontinent through surveys, railways, and legal codifications often exacerbated regional differences rather than flattening them. This period saw the transformation of ports like Calcutta and Madras into global gateways and the emergence of intense peasant politics, such as the Tebhaga and Moplah movements, which were deeply rooted in specific regional socio-economic grievances.
A central focus is the divergence of these regions during the 20th century, particularly the traumatic partitions of Bengal and Punjab, which stood in contrast to the relative territorial continuity of South India and the Deccan. In the post-independence period, the book analyzes how developmentalist projects like the Green Revolution and the rise of industrial and IT corridors in South India further differentiated regional economies. The linguistic reorganization of states is presented as a pivotal moment in the success of Indian federalism, providing a political framework that accommodated regional aspirations while maintaining national unity.
Ultimately, the book concludes that South Asian national identity is an ongoing negotiation between its diverse constituent parts. By foregrounding the "granular" histories of specific landscapes, languages, and social formations, it argues that regionalism is not a threat to the nation but its foundational reality. The comparative study emphasizes that the future of the subcontinent depends on its ability to leverage these unique regional strengths and historical legacies, suggesting that the nation-state is best understood as a vibrant tapestry woven from its distinct and resilient heartlands.
The book is aimed at students and scholars of South Asian history, particularly those interested in regional studies, comparative history, and the interplay of geography, economy, and polity. It would benefit researchers examining how local specificities shape national narratives, as well as policymakers and development professionals seeking to understand regional variations in agrarian systems, industrialization, and social movements. General readers with an interest in Indian history beyond national-level narratives would also find value in its detailed comparative approach.
March 5, 2026
English
50,954 words
3 hours 34 minutes
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