Rural Sociology in India A.R. Desai

rural sociology in india by ar desai book cover

Overview

Rural Sociology in India attempts to present in one volume significant writings from the large body of literature on various aspects of Indian rural society.

Publisher Popular Prakashan Bombay
ISBN 8171541542
Year 1997
Pages 968
Format PDF

Summary

Rural Sociology in India, though emerging from the earlier work Introduction to Rural Sociology in India, is a thoroughly revised and enlarged book and, as far as its readings are concerned, a completely new work on the subject.

Introduction to Rural Sociology in India was first published in 1953 and went out of print in 1955. It was essentially conceived as an introductory approach to rural sociology in India and was divided into two parts. The first part served as a general theoretical guide to the study of rural society in India, while the second part consisted of a collection of readings.

These readings reflected the views of eminent scholars—many of them of international repute—as well as organizations concerned with the scope, methods, utility, and lines of inquiry developed by the emerging discipline of rural sociology. They were included primarily to facilitate the inauguration and development of rural sociological studies in India.

The scope and content of the present work have been substantially transformed. It no longer merely emphasizes the need for a scientific approach to the study of rural society; rather, it delineates a comprehensive picture of rural social life in India as it emerges from a wide range of empirical studies examining its many dimensions. In this sense, the book is almost entirely new.

Even Part One, which remains largely intact, acquires a new significance in the context of the revised work. Part Two now contains readings selected exclusively to present a kaleidoscopic picture of the rich and complex drama of rural social life unfolding in the Indian countryside.

Although Part Two is composed of readings drawn from diverse studies, it follows a definite design. The ten sections that organize these readings form a coherent pattern. When examined carefully, they reveal the broad tendencies shaping the development of rural society in India.

Read in conjunction with the theoretical formulations presented in Part One, and with some special studies conducted by the author and included as readings in Part Two, this volume goes beyond being a mere introduction to rural sociology. It may more appropriately be titled Rural Sociology in India, and can also be regarded as a sourcebook on rural sociology in the Indian context.

Since Independence, rural society in India has acquired a new significance. It is no longer viewed simply as a hinterland producing raw materials. The agrarian sector provides the fundamental morphological framework of Indian society, particularly in its underdeveloped form.

The Government of the Indian Union has undertaken vigorous efforts to transform Indian society in accordance with the principles of progress enshrined in the Constitution and concretely articulated through successive Five-Year Plans. The agrarian social structure, which constitutes the very anatomy of Indian society, is being reshaped with increasing thoroughness.

Beginning with the First Five-Year Plan, sustained efforts have been made to overhaul the productive base of rural society, as well as its institutional and ideological superstructure. These efforts aim to transform its ecological framework, modes of economic production, patterns of class relations, social institutions and associations, configurations of political power, and the value systems underlying cultural life.

Indian rural society is thus subjected to the pressures of actively operating agents of social change and has been thrust into a whirlpool of unprecedented transformation. Though the rural social order may appear shapeless at times, more than a decade after Independence, Indian society—and particularly its rural sector—has begun to acquire a discernible design. It is this design that calls for systematic comprehension.

Contents

  • Introduction to Rural Sociology in India
    • Study of Rural Sociology in India
    • Rural Sociology, Its Origin and Scope
    • Rural–Urban Differences
    • Village, Its History
    • Regional Approach to Rural Society
    • Rural People
    • Economic Life of the Rural People
    • Rural Family
    • Caste System in Rural India
    • Political Life of the Rural People
    • Rural Religion
    • Rural Education
    • Aesthetic Culture of the Rural People
    • Changing Rural World
    • Rural Sociology, a Guide to Rural Reconstruction
    • Conclusion
  • Introductory Readings
    • Sociological Analysis of India — A. R. Desai
    • Sociological Problems of Economic Development — A. R. Desai
  • Regional Studies
    • Geographical Factors in Indian History — B. Subbarao
    • Diversity and Unity in the Subcontinent — O. H. K. Spate
    • Unity in Indian Diversity — N. K. Bose
    • Demarcation of Agrarian Regions of India — Daniel Thorner
  • Historical Perspectives
    • The Unity of India — K. S. Shelvanakar
    • Indian Feudalism — D. D. Kosambi
    • Indian Feudalism, Its Characteristics — K. S. Shelvanakar
    • Village Communities — D. Chattopadhyaya
  • Indian Village Community
    • Teachings of History — A. S. Altekar
    • Village Communities in India: A Historical Outline — H. D. Malaviya
    • The Social Organism — Ramakrishna Mukherjee
    • Victory of Village — D. D. Kosambi
    • The Indian Village — Irawati Karve
    • The Indian Village — O. H. K. Spate
    • Social Structure and Change in Indian Peasant Communities — S. C. Dube
    • Forms of Villages — Shantibhushan Nandi and D. S. Tyagi
  • Tribes in Transition
    • Tribes in Transition — A. R. Desai
    • A Tribal People in an Industrial Setting — Martin Orans
    • Tribal Cultures of Peninsular India as a Dimension of the Little Tradition — Surajit Sinha
    • Appraisal — G. S. Ghurye
  • Rural Stratification
    • Agrarian Stratification in India — Agricultural Labour Enquiry Report
    • Rural Class Structure in West Bengal — Ramakrishna Mukherjee
    • Rural Class Structure in Gujarat — S. M. Shah
    • Some Aspects of Indian Agriculture — Sulekha Chandra Gupta
    • Some Aspects of Caste in West Bengal — Nirmal Kumar Bose
    • Maliks and Moneylenders: Their Role — Daniel Thorner
    • Two Powerful Classes in Agrarian Areas — D. R. Gadgil
    • The Problems of the Marginal Farmers in Indian Agriculture — Upay Mehta
  • Rural India: Glimpses
    • Social Drama in a Tanjore Village — E. Kathleen Gough
    • The Changing Status of a Depressed Caste — Bernard S. Cohn
    • Changes in Social Life in a Gujarat Village — Indian Institute of Agricultural Economics
    • Madhopur Revisited — Bernard S. Cohn
    • Communication of Modern Ideas and Knowledge in Indian Villages — Y. B. Damle
  • Agrarian Unrest
    • Indian Kisans before Independence — A. R. Desai
    • Agrarian Unrest after Independence — H. D. Malaviya
    • Inter-Caste Tensions — D. N. Majumdar et al.
    • Panchayats and Village Conflicts — H. D. Malaviya
    • Peasants and Revolution — Hamza Alavi
  • Land Reforms
    • Impact of Land Reforms in Baroda District — V. V. Kolhatkar and S. B. Mahabal
    • Tenancy Policy in Saurashtra — P. S. Sanghvi
    • Tenancy Act in Maharashtra — V. M. Dandekar and G. J. Khudanpur
    • Impact of Land Reforms in Gujarat — M. B. Desai
    • On Land Reforms — A. M. Khusro
    • Land Reforms in India — P. C. Joshi
    • Land Reforms — Daniel Thorner
  • Cooperation, Rural Industries and Village Institutions
    • Cooperation as a Remedy — Arun Chandra Guha
    • Village Cooperatives — All India Rural Credit Survey
    • Context for Cooperatives in Rural India — Daniel Thorner
    • Rural Industries — Community Projects and N.E.S. Report
    • Difficulties Confronting Cottage Industries — Rural Credit Survey
    • Problems of Administration — Rural Credit Survey
    • Inappropriate Village Institutions — Rural Credit Survey
  • Panchayati Raj
    • The Problem — Hugh Gray
    • Panchayati Raj in Action — P. K. Chaudhari
    • Structure of Panchayats — Planning Commission
    • Social Structure and Village Panchayats — Yogendra Singh
    • Impact of Panchayati Raj on Rural India — Upay Mehta
  • Community Development Projects
    • Historical Survey — S. Thirumalai
    • Evaluation of Community Development Projects — Government Report
    • Sociological Analysis — A. R. Desai
    • Critical Review — S. C. Dube
  • Bhoodan and Gramdan Movements
    • Bhoodan Yagna — Acharya Vinoba Bhave
    • Bhoodan, Its Evaluation — Daniel Thorner
    • Sampattidan and Bhoodan Movement — C. G. Shah
    • The Gramdan Movement — Manmohan Choudhuri
    • Myth and Reality of Communitarian Villages — T. K. Oommen
    • Sarvodaya — B. T. Ranadive
  • Rural Society in Transition
    • Trends in Rural Change — S. Thirumalai
    • Planned Culture Change in India — David G. Mandelbaum
    • Fluidity of Status Structure — D. N. Majumdar
    • Organisation of Agricultural Production — D. R. Gadgil
    • Changing Power Structure of Village Community — Yogendra Singh
    • Political Leadership in West Bengal — Myron Weiner
    • Village Politics in Kerala — E. Kathleen Gough
    • Impact of Governmental Measures — A. R. Desai
    • Changes in Agrarian Organization — Lucio Mendieta y Núñez
  • Theories of Agrarian Development
    • Agriculture in a Developing Economy — M. L. Dantwala
    • New Strategy for Agricultural Development — V. M. Dandekar
    • The Strategy of Agricultural Advance — Surendra J. Patel
    • Reliance on Rich Farmers — A. R. Desai
    • Betting on the Strong — W. F. Wertheim
    • The Political Economy of Backwardness — Paul A. Baran
    • Industrialization of Backward Countries — Ernest Germain
    • The Colonial Revolution — W. F. Wertheim

Author

A.R. Desai (1915–1994) was a prominent Indian sociologist and one of the most influential pioneers of Marxist sociology in India. Born in Nadiad, Gujarat, Desai was educated at the University of Bombay (now the University of Mumbai), where he earned degrees in sociology and law, and later completed his PhD under the supervision of the eminent sociologist G. S. Ghurye. Despite studying under a largely Indological and culturalist tradition, Desai developed a distinctively Marxist approach that emphasized historical materialism, class relations, and economic structures.

Desai is best known for applying a rigorous historical and dialectical method to the study of Indian society. His seminal work, Social Background of Indian Nationalism (1948), offered a groundbreaking Marxist interpretation of the Indian nationalist movement, arguing that nationalism was shaped by changing class interests under colonial capitalism rather than by purely cultural or spiritual forces. This work marked a major departure from dominant nationalist and functionalist explanations.

Throughout his academic career at the University of Bombay, where he later served as Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology, Desai focused on themes such as agrarian relations, peasant movements, urbanization, state power, and democratic struggles. He consistently emphasized the role of economic forces and class conflict in social change, while remaining critical of modernization theory and cultural determinism.

Beyond his scholarship, Desai played an important institutional role in Indian sociology, serving as President of the Indian Sociological Society. His legacy lies in establishing a strong tradition of critical, Marxist social analysis in India and inspiring generations of sociologists to study social inequality, power, and historical transformation through a structural lens.

Book Details

Title Rural Sociology in India A.R. Desai
Author
Publisher Popular Prakashan Bombay
Date 1997
Pages 968
Country India
ISBN 8171541542
Format PDF
Filesize 88.2 MB
URL A.R. Desai Rural Sociology in India A.R. Desai pdf