Sekhar Bandyopadhyay (born 7 July 1952) is an Indian historian and a Fellow of the
Royal Society Te Apārangi. Bandyopadhyay is known for his research on the Dalit caste of
Bengal.[1]
Life
Bandyopadhyay was born to Nanigopal Bandyopadhyay,[2] a professor of
Bengali[3] and Pratima Bandyopadhyay. Bandyopadhyay earned his B.A. degree in History at
Presidency College and an M.A. degree at the
University of Calcutta. He was awarded a doctorate at the
University of Calcutta.[4] He is married to Srilekha Bandyopadhyay and lives in
Wellington with his wife.
Since 2021, the Sekhar Bandyopadhyay Prize has been awarded annually by the Department of History at
Victoria University of Wellington to the student submitting the best essay or thesis on an aspect of Indian history or the history of colonialism or nationalism.[13][14] The award 'acknowledges and celebrates the distinguished career of Professor Sekhar Bandyopadhyay, Professor of History at Victoria University of Wellington'.[15]
Inaugural Fellow, New Zealand Academy of Humanities[12]
Select works
Monographs
Burma To-day: Economic Development and Political Control since 1962 (1987)
Caste, Politics and the Raj: Bengal 1872–1937 (1990)
Caste, Protest and Identity in Colonial India: The Namasudras of Bengal, 1872–1947 (1997; Second Edition 2011)
Caste, Culture and Hegemony: Social Dominance in Colonial Bengal (2004)
From Plassey to Partition and After: A History of Modern India (2004; Second Revised and Enlarged Edition 2015)
Decolonization in South Asia: Meanings of Freedom in Post-independence West Bengal, 1947–52 (2009/2012)
Caste and Partition in Bengal: The Story of Dalit Refugees, 1946–1961 (2022, With Anasua Basu Raychaudhury)
Edited collections
Bengal: Rethinking History. Essays in Historiography (2001)
Nationalist Movement in India: A Reader (2009)
India in New Zealand: Local Identities, Global Relations (2010)
Decolonization and Politics of Transition in South Asia (2016)
Co-edited collections
Caste and Communal Politics in South Asia (1993, with Suranjan Das)
Bengal: Communities, Development and States (1994, with Abhijit Dasgupta and William Van Schendel)
People of India: West Bengal, 2 volumes (2008, with T. Bagchi and R.K. Bhattacharya)
China, India and the End of Development Models (2011, with X. Huang and A.C. Tan)
Globalization and Challenges of Development in Contemporary India (2016, with Sita Venkateshwar)
Religion and Modernity in India (2016, with Aloka Parashar Sen)
Calcutta: The Stormy Decades (2015, with
Tanika Sarkar)
Indians and the Antipodes: Networks, Boundaries and Circulation (2018, with Jane Buckingham)
Caste in Bengal: Histories of Hierarchy, Exclusion and Resistance (2022, with
Tanika Sarkar)
Books in Bengali
Ashtadas Sataker Mughal Sankat O Adhunik Itihas Chinta [Eighteenth-Century Mughal Crisis and Modern Historical Thinking] (1995)
Jati, Varna O Bangali Samaj [Caste, Varna and Bengali Society] (1998, co-edited with Abhijit Dasgupta)
Journal articles
"Caste, Nation and Modernity: Indian Nationalism's Unresolved Dilemma" [A.R. Davis Memorial Lecture, Sydney, 2016], The Journal of the Oriental Society of Australia, 48 (2016), pp. 5–24.
"India-New Zealand Relations in the New Century: A Historical Narrative of Changing Perceptions and Shifting Priorities", India Quarterly, 69(4) (2013), pp. 317–333.
"Rabindranath Tagore, Indian Nation and Its Outcasts", Harvard Asia Quarterly, 15 (1) (Spring 2013), pp. 28–33.
"Partition and the Ruptures in Dalit Identity Politics in Bengal", Asian Studies Review, 33 (4) (2009), pp. 455–467.
"A History of Small Numbers: Indians in New Zealand, c.1890s–1990s", New Zealand Journal of History, 43 (2) (2009), pp. 150–168.
"Freedom and its Enemies: Politics of Transition in West Bengal, 1947–1949", South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, XXIX (1) (April 2006), pp. 43–68.
"Transfer of Power and the Crisis of Dalit Politics in India, 1945-47", Modern Asian Studies, 34 (4) (2000), pp. 893–942.
"Protest and Accommodation: Two Caste Movements in Eastern and Northern Bengal, c1872–1937", The Indian Historical Review, XIV (1–2) (1990), pp. 219–33.
"Caste in the Perception of the Raj: A Note on the Evolution of Colonial Sociology of Bengal", Bengal Past and Present, CIV, Parts I–II (198–199) (January–December 1985), pp. 56–80.
"Caste, Class and Census: Aspects of Social Mobility in Bengal under the Raj, 1872-1931", The Calcutta Historical Journal, V (2) (January–June 1981), pp. 93–128.
Book chapters
"Caste and Politics in Bengal: Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century", in Sabyasachi Bhattacharya (Ed.) Comprehensive History of Modern Bengal 1700–1950, Volume III, Kolkata: Asiatic Society of Bengal, 2019, pp. 338–386.
"Indian Unity and the Caste Question: Nationalist Readings of History" in S. Bhattacharya (Ed.) Rethinking the Cultural Unity of India, Kolkata: Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture, 2015, pp. 324–354.
"Does Caste Matter in Bengal? Examining the Myth of Bengali Exceptionalism", in M.N. Chakraborty (Ed.) Being Bengali: At home and in the World, London and New York: Routledge, 2014, pp. 32–47.
"Caste, Class and Culture in Colonial India", in S. Z. H. Zafri (Ed.) Recording the Progress of Indian History: Symposia Papers of the Indian History Congress 1992–2010, Delhi: Primus Books, 2012, pp. 225–239.
"The Minorities in Post-Partition West Bengal: The Riots of 1950" in Abhijit Dasgupta et.al (Eds.) Minorities and the State: Changing Social and Political Landscape of Bengal, New Delhi, Sage Publications, 2011, pp. 3–17.
"Caste, Widow-Remarriage, and the Reform of Popular Culture in Colonial Bengal", in
Sumit Sarkar and
Tanika Sarkar (Eds.) Women and Social Reform in Modern India: A Reader, Volume II, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007, pp. 100–117.
"Eighteen-Fifty-Seven and Its Many Histories", in 1857: Essays from Economic and Political Weekly, Hyderabad: Orient Longman, 2007, pp. 1–22.
"From Subjects to Citizens: Reactions to Colonial Rule and the Changing Political Culture of Calcutta in the mid-nineteenth century", in Michael Wilding and Mabel Lee (eds.) Society and Culture: Essays in Honour of S.N. Mukherjee, New Delhi: Manohar Publishers and Distributors, 1997, pp. 9–31.
"Popular Religion and Social Mobility in Colonial Bengal: The Matua Sect and the Namasudras", in Rajat K. Ray (Ed.) Mind, Body and Society: Life and Mentality in Colonial Bengal, Calcutta: Oxford University Press, 1995, pp. 152–192.