651
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Taking Callon to Calcutta: did economist-administrators make market in the colony?

References

  • Allen, R.C. & Grada, C.O. (1988). On the road again with Arthur Young: English, Irish, and French agriculture during the industrial revolution. The Journal of Economic History, XLVIII(1), 93–116.
  • Alvi, S.S. ( Trans. and Ed.). (1989). Advice on the art of governance: Mau'izah-I-Jahangiri of Muhammad Baqir Najm-I Sani – An Indo-Islamic mirror of princes. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press..
  • Ambirajan, S. (1978). Classical political economy and British policy in India. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press..
  • Arjomand, S.A. (2001). Perso-Indian statecraft, Greek political science and the Muslim idea of government. International Sociology, 16(3), 455–473.
  • Asad, T. (1994). Ethnographic representation, statistics and modern power. Social Research, 61(1), 55–88.
  • Banerjee, A. & Iyer, L. (2005). History, institutions and economic performance: The legacy of colonial land tenure systems in India. The American Economic Review, 95(4), 1190–1213.
  • Banerjee, T. (1972). History of internal trade barriers in British India. Calcutta: Asiatic Society..
  • Barber, W.J. (1975). British economic thought and India 1600–1858. Oxford: Clarendon Press..
  • Basu, T. (1990). Dakshinbange Reshamshilpa O Ekti Prachin Punthi [Silk industry in south Bengal and an old Palmyra manuscript]. Academy Patrika, Bangla Academy (Calcutta), 68–84..
  • Bhadra, G. (1994). Iman O Nishan: Unish Shatake Banglar Krishak Chaitanayer Ekti Adhyay 1800–1850 [Faith and the flag: Some aspects of Bengali peasant consciousness in the nineteenth century 1800-1850]. Calcutta: Subarnarekha..
  • Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1976). Farmers, rituals and modernization: A sociological study. Calcutta: Minerva Associates..
  • Bose, S. (1986). Agrarian Bengal: Economy, social structure and politics 1919–1947. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press..
  • Bowen, H.V. (2002). ‘No longer mere traders’: Continuities and change in the metropolitan development of the East India Company 1600–1834. In H.V. Bowen, M. Lincoln & N. Rigby (Eds.), The worlds of the East India Company (pp. 19–32). Woodbridge: Boydell Press..
  • Çalişkan, K. & Callon, M. (2009). Economization, part 1: Shifting attention from the economy towards processes of economization. Economy and Society, 38(3), 369–398.
  • Callon, M. (1998). Introduction: The embeddedness of economic markets in economics. In M. Callon (Ed.), The laws of the markets (pp. 1–57). Oxford: Blackwell..
  • Callon, M. (2005). Why virtualism paves the way to political impotence: A reply to Daniel Miller's critique of ‘The laws of the markets’. Economic Sociology: European Electronic Newsletter, 6(2), 3–20.
  • Callon, M. (2007). What does it mean to say that economics is performative? In D. MacKenzie, F. Muniesa & L. Siu (Eds.), Do economists make markets? (pp. 311–357). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press..
  • Callon, M. & Muniesa, F. (2005). Economic markets as calculative collective devices. Organization Studies, 26(8), 1229–1250.
  • Carruthers, B.G. & Espeland, W.N. (1991). Accounting for rationality: Double-entry bookkeeping and the rhetoric of economic rationality. American Journal of Sociology, 97(1), 31–69.
  • Chakrabarty, D. (2000). Provincializing Europe. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press..
  • Chandra, B. (1966). The rise and growth of economic nationalism in India. New Delhi: People's Publishing House..
  • Chatterjee, P. (1986). The colonial state and peasant resistance in Bengal 1920–1947. Past and Present, 110(1), 169–204.
  • Chatterjee, P. (2004). The politics of the governed. New York, NY: Columbia University Press..
  • Colebrooke, H.T. (1884). Remarks on the husbandry and internal commerce of Bengal (2nd ed.). Calcutta: Statesman Steam Printing Works..
  • Congost, R. (2003). Property rights and historical analysis: What rights? What history?Past and Present, 181(1), 73–106.
  • Datta, R. (1986). Merchants and peasants: A study of the structure of local trade in grain in late eighteenth century Bengal. Indian Economic and Social History Review, 23(4), 379–402.
  • Datta, R. (1999). From medieval to modern: Markets, territoriality and the transition in eighteenth century Bengal. The Medieval History Journal, 2(1), 143–167.
  • Deleuze, G. (1992). What is a dispositif? In T.J. Armstrong (Ed.), Michel Foucault philosopher (pp. 159–168). Hemel Hempstead: Harvester Wheatsheaf..
  • Desrosières, A. (1990). How to make things which hold together: Social science, statistics and the state. In P. Wagner, B. Wittrock & R. Whitley (Eds.), Discourses on Society (Vol. XV, pp. 195–218). Amsterdam: Kluwer..
  • Desrosières, A. (1991). The part in relation to the whole: How to generalise? The prehistory of representative sampling. In M. Bulmer, K. Bales & K.K. Sklar (Eds.), The social survey in historical perspective (pp. 217–244). Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press..
  • Fazl, A. (1872). The Ain-I Akbari by Abu'l-Fazl Allami [The Constitution of Akbar by Abu'l-Fazl Allami] (Ed. Blochmann, H.). Calcutta: Asiatic Society of Bengal..
  • Forman, V. (2004). Transformations of value and the production of ‘Investment’ in the early history of the English East India Company. Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 34(3), 611–41.
  • Foucault, M. (2008). The birth of biopolitics ( G. Burchell, Trans.). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan..
  • Francis, Sir P. (1782). Original minutes of the Governor-General and Council of Fort William on the settlement and collection of revenues of Bengal, with a plan of settlement recommended to the Court of Directors in January, 1776. London: J. Debrett..
  • Goswami, M. (2004). Producing India: From colonial economy to national space. Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press..
  • Guha, R. (1983). Elementary aspects of peasant insurgency in colonial India. Delhi: Oxford University Press..
  • Guha, R. (1996). A rule of property for Bengal. Durham: Duke University Press..
  • Habib, I. (1999). The agrarian system of Mughal India 1556–1707. Delhi: Oxford University Press..
  • Hilts, V.L. (1978). Aliis exterendum, or, the origins of the statistical society of London. Isis, 69(1), 21–43.
  • Hunter, W.W. (1897). Annals of rural Bengal. London: Smith, Elder..
  • Larrère, C. (1992). L'invention de l'économie au XVIIIe siècle: Du droit naturel à la physiocratie [The Invention of the Economy in the 18th Century: From natural law to physiocracy]. Paris: PUF..
  • Latour, B. (1999). Pandora's hope: An essay on the reality of science studies. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press..
  • Latour, B. (2000). On the partial existence of existing and non-existing objects. In L. Daston (Ed.), Biographies of scientific objects (pp. 247–269). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press..
  • Lawson, P. (1982). Parliament and the east India inquiry, 1767. Parliamentary History, 1(1), 99–114.
  • Majumdar, G.P. & Banerju, S.C. (Trans. and Ed.)(1960). Krsi-Parasara. Bibliotheca Indica, Calcutta: Asiatic Society..
  • McLaren, M. (2001). British India & British Scotland, 1780–1830: Career-building, empire-building, and a Scottish school of thought on Indian governance. Akron, OH: University of Akron Press..
  • Mennicken, A. & Miller, P. (2012). Accounting, territorialization and power. Foucault Studies, 13(May), 4–24.
  • Mitchell, T. (2002). Rule of experts: Egypt, techno-politics, modernity. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press..
  • Mohammed, K. K. (1989). Bazars in Mughal India: an essay in architectural study and interpretation. Islamic Culture, LX (III), 60–76.
  • Mukhopadhyay, B. (1990–91). Forced commercialisation in early colonial Bengal: A model and beyond. Calcutta Historical Journal, 15(1–2), 28–82.
  • Mukhopadhyay, B. (1995). Orientalism, genealogy and the writing of history: The idea of resistance to silk filature in eighteenth century Bengal. Studies in History, 11(2), 189–226.
  • Mukhopadhyay, H. (1943). Krsi-tattwa [Discourse on agriculture] (Vol. I). Calcutta: BK Das..
  • Perrot, J.-C. (1992). Une histoire intellectuelle de l'économie politique, XVIIe -XVIIIe siècles [An Intellectual History of Political Economy]. Paris: EHESS..
  • Schabas, M. & Marchi N.D. (2003). Introduction to oeconomies in the age of Newton. History of Political Economy, 35(Suppl. 1), 1–13.
  • Schaffer, S. (1997). The earth's fertility as a social fact in early modern Britain. In M. Teich, R. Porter & B. Gustaffson (Eds.), Nature and society in historical context (pp. 124–147). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press..
  • Scott, J.E. (1976). The moral economy of the peasant. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press..
  • Sen, P. (1867). Krsikarjyer Mat [Views on Agriculture and Farming]. Dacca: Ishanchandra Sil..
  • Sen, S. (1998). Empire of free trade: The East India Company and the making of the colonial marketplace. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press..
  • Smith, A. (1991 [1776]). The wealth of nations. London: Everyman's..
  • Smith, B. (1994). Classifying the universe: The ancient Indian varna system and the origins of caste. Oxford: Oxford University Press..
  • Staves, S. (1995). The construction of the public interest in the debates over Fox's India Bill. Prose Studies, 18(3), 175–98.
  • Stein, B. (1990). Thomas Munro: The origins of the colonial state and his vision of empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press..
  • Stern, P.J. (2011). The company-state: Corporate sovereignty and the early modern foundations of the British empire in India. New York, NY: Oxford University Press..
  • Steuart, J. (1772). The principles of money applied to the present state of the coin in Bengal. London..
  • Stokes, E. (1959). The English utilitarians and India. Oxford: Clarendon Press..
  • Sutherland, L. (1952). The East India Company in eighteenth century politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press..
  • Taussig, M. (1980). The devil and commodity fetishism in South America. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press..
  • Thévenot, L. (1984). Rules and implements: Investment in forms. Social Science Information, 23(1), 1–45.
  • Thompson, G. (1994). Early double-entry bookkeeping and the rhetoric of economic rationality. In A. G. Hopwood & P. Miller (Eds.), Accounting as a social and institutional practice (pp. 40–66). Cambridge: Cambridge University..
  • Travers, R. (2004). ‘The real value of lands’: The Nawabs, the British and the land tax in eighteenth century Bengal. Modern Asian Studies, 38(3), 535–44.
  • Tribe, K. (1978). Land, labour and economic discourse. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul..
  • Tribe, K. (1995). Professors Malthus and Jones: Political economy at the East India College 1806–1858. European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2(2), 327–354.
  • Tribe, K. (1999). Adam Smith: Critical theorist? Journal of Economic Literature, 37(2), 609–632.
  • Vaughn, J. (2009). The politics of empire: Metropolitan socio-political development and the imperial transformation of the British East India Company, 1675–1775. Unpublished PhD dissertation. Department of History, University of Chicago, Chicago..
  • West Bengal State Archives, Calcutta. Proceedings of the Board of Trade (Commercial) (1770–1833) ( manuscript, 500 volumes)..
  • Wojtilla, G. (1999). History of krsisastra ( Acta Universitatis Attila Jozsef Nominatae: Acta Antiqua et Archaelogica: Supplementum IX). Szeged: University of Szeged..
  • Young, A. (1770). A six months tour through the North of England (4 Vols). London: W. Nicoll..
  • Young, A. (1772). Six weeks tour, through the Southern countries of England and Wales (3rd ed.). London: W. Nicoll..
  • Young, A. (1788). On the profit of a farm. Annals of agriculture and other useful arts, Volume IX, (pp. 235–244). Bury St Edmund's: Arthur Young, Esq.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.