Introduction. Decolonising the soldier; Part I. Colonial Soldiers: 1. Making colonial soldiers in British India; 2. Unmaking an imperial army; 3. Politics and prisoners in the Indian army; Part II. Going to War: 4. Defeat, drill and discipline; 5. Ritual, solidarity and sacrifice; 6. Battle; Part III. History and Theory: 7. The experience and representation of combat; 8. Cosmopolitan military histories and sociologies.
Barkawi re-imagines the study of war with imperial and multinational armies that fought in Asia in the Second World War.
Tarak Barkawi is Reader in the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science.
'It is sociological military history of the highest quality.'
Christopher Dandeker, King's College London
'Only very rarely does a book come along which rips up the existing
foundations of our thought and forces us to rethink the pigeon
holes into which we put it. This is such a book. If you have been
perplexed as to why Sikhs became the bedrock of the British Indian
Amy but have not joined today's British Army in the same numbers,
Tarak Barkawi gives you the answer. The implications, however,
range far beyond his declared subject matter, challenging not just
how we conceptualise armies and the ways in which they fight, but
also how we configure the battles in which they kill and are
killed.' Sir Hew Strachan, military historian
'How does an army succeed in beating a tough enemy, overcoming its
own racial, caste and linguistic hierarchies and divisions? Tarak
Barkawi's fascinating book on the Indian Army in World War II draws
important lessons for those interested in the causes of imperial
control and military effectiveness.' Steven Wilkinson, Yale
University, Connecticut
'Both the scholarship and popular wisdom about modern armies links
their loyalty, courage and sacrifice to shared identities, whether
national, racial or ethnic. In this superb study of the
multi-racial, multi-lingual and multi-religious British Indian army
during the Second World War, Tarak Barkawi demonstrates how this
simplistic view can only be sustained by consigning imperial and
other diverse or non-national forces to backward peoples and
non-modern pasts. He points out that far from being historical
curiosities, such cosmopolitan armies have increasingly come to
characterise warfare all over the world, with the Indian army
itself transformed from an old-fashioned colonial force to a global
one in the 1940s. Using imperial history to question the Western
obsession with citizen-armies, themselves more myth than reality,
Barkawi allows us to understand the changing nature of military
cohesion in fresh new ways.' Faisal Devji, University of Oxford
'Tarak Barkawi brings his unusual insight to the timeless question
of how soldiers are made and why they fight. In challenging much of
the received wisdom about the relationship between the armed forces
and society, this original and richly documented account of British
Indian and British imperial forces underscores the value of
bringing a postcolonial perspective to the study of the military.
This path-breaking book will be of interest to historians,
political scientists and sociologists. It is likely to become a
classic in the field.' Elizabeth Kier, University of Washington
'Soldiers of Empire is a wonderful book: beautifully written,
expertly crafted and mixing high theory with historical detail in a
way that is as rare as it is illuminating. All contributors to this
forum agree that it is a work of immense scholarship, one that
occupies an innovative space at the interstices of military
history, historical sociology and post-colonial theory.' George
Lawson, International Affairs
'… Barkawi challenges understandings of soldiers and armies in all
contexts, demonstrates the colonial underpinnings of military
historiography (and their incorporation in contemporary
scholarship), and establishes the central role of empire in shaping
the military forces of both the past and today. As such, this book
should be essential reading for scholars of military history,
(critical) war studies, and global and postcolonial international
relations at all levels.' Emil Archambault, International Studies
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