In the White Mutiny of 1859-61--the largest revolt the British
army ever faced--European troops operating on behalf of the East
India Company rebelled against their transfer to the service of the
Queen of England. Through an analysis of the White Mutiny, Peter
Stanley provides a portrait of emerging working-class consciousness
among the troops and reveals how the British army, the preeminent
icon of English imperialism, first maintained, then lost, control
over a vast and generally hostile sub-continent.
In cantonment offices in Meerut and Calcutta, we find unimpaired
the class distinctions and aspirations of contemporary Britain.
Penetrating the hidden worlds of the barrack room and the officers'
mess, White Mutiny demonstrates the intimate relationship between
the military and the social history of British culture in India,
and how awareness of each can enrich the other.
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