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Cultural
Change
2
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Cultural
Change
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Social Change and Development in India
16
We saw in the last chapter how colonialism brought in changes that altered
the structure of Indian society. Industrialisation and urbanisation transformed
the lives of people. Factories replaced fields as places of work for some. Cities
replaced villages as places to live for many. Living and working arrangements
or structures changed. Changes also took place in culture, ways of life, norms,
values, fashions and even body language. Sociologists understand social
structure as a ‘continuing arrangement of persons in relationships defined
or controlled by institutions’ and ‘culture’ as ‘socially established norms or
patterns of behaviour’. You have already studied about the structural changes
that colonialism brought about in Chapter 1. You will observe how important
those structural changes are for understanding the cultural changes that this
chapter seeks to understand.
This chapter looks at two related developments, both a complex product of
the impact of colonial rule. The first deals with the deliberate and conscious
efforts made by the 19
th
century social reformers and early 20
th
century
nationalists to bring in changes in social practices that discriminated against
women and ‘lower’ castes. The second with the less deliberate yet decisive
changes in cultural practices that can broadly be understood as the four
processes of sanskritisation, modernisation, secularisation and westernisation.
Sanskritisation pre-dates the coming of colonial rule. The other three processes
can be understood better as complex responses of the people of India to the
changes that colonialism brought about.
2.1 Social reform movement S in the
19th and early 20th century You have already seen the far-
reaching impact of colonialism
on our lives. The social reform
movements which emerged in
India in the 19
th
century arose to
the challenges that colonial Indian
society faced. You probably are
familiar with what were termed
social evils that plagued Indian
society. The well-known issues
are that of sati, child marriage,
ban on widow remarriage and
caste discrimination. It is not that attempts were not made to fight social
discrimination in pre-colonial India. They were central to Buddhism, Bhakti
and Sufi movements. What marked these 19
th
century social reform attempts
was the modern context and mix of ideas. It was a creative combination of
modern ideas of western liberalism and a new look on traditional literature.
Raja Ram Mohun Roy Pandita Ramabai Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
Chapter 2.indd 16 14 September 2022 12:03:08
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Page 3
Cultural
Change
2
Chapter 2.indd 15 14 September 2022 12:03:07
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Social Change and Development in India
16
We saw in the last chapter how colonialism brought in changes that altered
the structure of Indian society. Industrialisation and urbanisation transformed
the lives of people. Factories replaced fields as places of work for some. Cities
replaced villages as places to live for many. Living and working arrangements
or structures changed. Changes also took place in culture, ways of life, norms,
values, fashions and even body language. Sociologists understand social
structure as a ‘continuing arrangement of persons in relationships defined
or controlled by institutions’ and ‘culture’ as ‘socially established norms or
patterns of behaviour’. You have already studied about the structural changes
that colonialism brought about in Chapter 1. You will observe how important
those structural changes are for understanding the cultural changes that this
chapter seeks to understand.
This chapter looks at two related developments, both a complex product of
the impact of colonial rule. The first deals with the deliberate and conscious
efforts made by the 19
th
century social reformers and early 20
th
century
nationalists to bring in changes in social practices that discriminated against
women and ‘lower’ castes. The second with the less deliberate yet decisive
changes in cultural practices that can broadly be understood as the four
processes of sanskritisation, modernisation, secularisation and westernisation.
Sanskritisation pre-dates the coming of colonial rule. The other three processes
can be understood better as complex responses of the people of India to the
changes that colonialism brought about.
2.1 Social reform movement S in the
19th and early 20th century You have already seen the far-
reaching impact of colonialism
on our lives. The social reform
movements which emerged in
India in the 19
th
century arose to
the challenges that colonial Indian
society faced. You probably are
familiar with what were termed
social evils that plagued Indian
society. The well-known issues
are that of sati, child marriage,
ban on widow remarriage and
caste discrimination. It is not that attempts were not made to fight social
discrimination in pre-colonial India. They were central to Buddhism, Bhakti
and Sufi movements. What marked these 19
th
century social reform attempts
was the modern context and mix of ideas. It was a creative combination of
modern ideas of western liberalism and a new look on traditional literature.
Raja Ram Mohun Roy Pandita Ramabai Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
Chapter 2.indd 16 14 September 2022 12:03:08
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Cultural Change
17
Sociologist Satish Saberwal elaborates upon the modern context by
sketching three aspects to the modern framework of change in colonial India:
? modes of communication
? forms of organisation, and
? the nature of ideas
New technologies speeded up various forms of communication. The printing
press, telegraph, and later the microphone, movement of people and goods
through steamship and railways helped quick movement of new ideas. Within
India, social reformers from Punjab and Bengal exchanged ideas with reformers
from Madras and Maharashtra. Keshav Chandra Sen of Bengal visited Madras
in 1864. Pandita Ramabai travelled to different corners of the country. Some of
them went to other countries. Christian missionaries reached remote corners
of present day Nagaland, Mizoram and Meghalaya.
Modern social organisations like the Brahmo Samaj in Bengal and Arya
Samaj in Punjab were set up. The All-India Muslim Ladies Conference (Anjuman-
E-Khawatn-E-Islam) was founded in 1914. Indian reformers debated not just
in public meetings but through public media like newspapers and journals.
Translations of writings of social reformers from one Indian language to another
took place. For instance, Vishnu Shastri published a Marathi translation of
Vidyasagar’s book in Indu Prakash in 1868.
New ideas of liberalism and freedom, new ideas of homemaking and
marriage, new roles for mothers and daughters, new ideas of self-conscious
pride in culture and tradition emerged. The value of education became very
important. It was seen as very crucial for a nation to become modern but also
The mix of ideas
? Raja Ram Mohun Roy attacked the practice of sati on the basis of both appeals
to humanitarian and natural rights doctrines as well as Hindu shastras.
? Ranade’s writings entitled The T exts of the Hindu Law on the Lawfulness of the Remarriage
of Widows and Vedic Authorities for Widow Marriage elaborated the shastric sanction for
remarriage of widows.
? The content of new education was modernising and liberal. The literary content of the
courses in the humanities and social sciences was drawn from the literature of the European
Renaissance, Reformation and Enlightenment. Its themes were humanistic, secular and
liberal.
? Sir Syed Ahmed Khan’s interpretation of Islam emphasised the validity of free enquiry
(ijtihad) and the alleged similarities between Koranic revelations and the laws of nature
discovered by modern science.
? Kandukiri Viresalingam’s The Sources of Knowledge reflected his familiarity with navya-
nyaya logic. At the same time he translated the works of Julius Huxley, an eminent biologist.
Box 2.1
Chapter 2.indd 17 14 September 2022 12:03:08
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Page 4
Cultural
Change
2
Chapter 2.indd 15 14 September 2022 12:03:07
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Social Change and Development in India
16
We saw in the last chapter how colonialism brought in changes that altered
the structure of Indian society. Industrialisation and urbanisation transformed
the lives of people. Factories replaced fields as places of work for some. Cities
replaced villages as places to live for many. Living and working arrangements
or structures changed. Changes also took place in culture, ways of life, norms,
values, fashions and even body language. Sociologists understand social
structure as a ‘continuing arrangement of persons in relationships defined
or controlled by institutions’ and ‘culture’ as ‘socially established norms or
patterns of behaviour’. You have already studied about the structural changes
that colonialism brought about in Chapter 1. You will observe how important
those structural changes are for understanding the cultural changes that this
chapter seeks to understand.
This chapter looks at two related developments, both a complex product of
the impact of colonial rule. The first deals with the deliberate and conscious
efforts made by the 19
th
century social reformers and early 20
th
century
nationalists to bring in changes in social practices that discriminated against
women and ‘lower’ castes. The second with the less deliberate yet decisive
changes in cultural practices that can broadly be understood as the four
processes of sanskritisation, modernisation, secularisation and westernisation.
Sanskritisation pre-dates the coming of colonial rule. The other three processes
can be understood better as complex responses of the people of India to the
changes that colonialism brought about.
2.1 Social reform movement S in the
19th and early 20th century You have already seen the far-
reaching impact of colonialism
on our lives. The social reform
movements which emerged in
India in the 19
th
century arose to
the challenges that colonial Indian
society faced. You probably are
familiar with what were termed
social evils that plagued Indian
society. The well-known issues
are that of sati, child marriage,
ban on widow remarriage and
caste discrimination. It is not that attempts were not made to fight social
discrimination in pre-colonial India. They were central to Buddhism, Bhakti
and Sufi movements. What marked these 19
th
century social reform attempts
was the modern context and mix of ideas. It was a creative combination of
modern ideas of western liberalism and a new look on traditional literature.
Raja Ram Mohun Roy Pandita Ramabai Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
Chapter 2.indd 16 14 September 2022 12:03:08
Reprint 2024-25
Cultural Change
17
Sociologist Satish Saberwal elaborates upon the modern context by
sketching three aspects to the modern framework of change in colonial India:
? modes of communication
? forms of organisation, and
? the nature of ideas
New technologies speeded up various forms of communication. The printing
press, telegraph, and later the microphone, movement of people and goods
through steamship and railways helped quick movement of new ideas. Within
India, social reformers from Punjab and Bengal exchanged ideas with reformers
from Madras and Maharashtra. Keshav Chandra Sen of Bengal visited Madras
in 1864. Pandita Ramabai travelled to different corners of the country. Some of
them went to other countries. Christian missionaries reached remote corners
of present day Nagaland, Mizoram and Meghalaya.
Modern social organisations like the Brahmo Samaj in Bengal and Arya
Samaj in Punjab were set up. The All-India Muslim Ladies Conference (Anjuman-
E-Khawatn-E-Islam) was founded in 1914. Indian reformers debated not just
in public meetings but through public media like newspapers and journals.
Translations of writings of social reformers from one Indian language to another
took place. For instance, Vishnu Shastri published a Marathi translation of
Vidyasagar’s book in Indu Prakash in 1868.
New ideas of liberalism and freedom, new ideas of homemaking and
marriage, new roles for mothers and daughters, new ideas of self-conscious
pride in culture and tradition emerged. The value of education became very
important. It was seen as very crucial for a nation to become modern but also
The mix of ideas
? Raja Ram Mohun Roy attacked the practice of sati on the basis of both appeals
to humanitarian and natural rights doctrines as well as Hindu shastras.
? Ranade’s writings entitled The T exts of the Hindu Law on the Lawfulness of the Remarriage
of Widows and Vedic Authorities for Widow Marriage elaborated the shastric sanction for
remarriage of widows.
? The content of new education was modernising and liberal. The literary content of the
courses in the humanities and social sciences was drawn from the literature of the European
Renaissance, Reformation and Enlightenment. Its themes were humanistic, secular and
liberal.
? Sir Syed Ahmed Khan’s interpretation of Islam emphasised the validity of free enquiry
(ijtihad) and the alleged similarities between Koranic revelations and the laws of nature
discovered by modern science.
? Kandukiri Viresalingam’s The Sources of Knowledge reflected his familiarity with navya-
nyaya logic. At the same time he translated the works of Julius Huxley, an eminent biologist.
Box 2.1
Chapter 2.indd 17 14 September 2022 12:03:08
Reprint 2024-25
Social Change and Development in India
18
retain its ancient heritage. The idea of female education was debated
intensely. Significantly, it was the social reformer Jotiba Phule who
opened the first school for women in Pune. Reformers argued that for a
society to progress women have to be educated. Some of them believed
that in pre-modern India, women were educated. Others contested this
on the grounds that this was so only of a privileged few. Thus attempts
to justify female education were made by recourse to both modern
and traditional ideas. They actively debated the meanings of tradition
and modernity. Jotiba Phule thus recalled the glory of pre-Aryan age
while others like Bal Gangadhar Tilak emphasised the glory of the
Aryan period. In other words, 19
th
century reform initiated a period of
questioning, reinterpretations
and both intellectual and
social growth.
The varied social reform
movements did have common
themes. Yet there were also
significant differences. For
some the concerns were
confined to the problems that
the upper caste, middle class
women and men faced. For
others the injustices suffered
by the discriminated castes
were central questions. For
some social evils had emerged
because of a decline of the true
spirit of Hinduism. For others
caste and gender oppression
was intrinsic to the religion.
Vidyasagar
Viresalingam
Jotiba Phule
Find out about some of the social
reformers mentioned below? What
issues did they fight for? How did
they conduct their campaign? Was
there any opposition?
? Viresalingam
? Pandita Ramabai
? Vidyasagar
? Dayanand Saraswati
? Jyotiba Phule
? Sri Narayan Guru
? Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
? Any other
Activity 2.1
Chapter 2.indd 18 14 September 2022 12:03:08
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Page 5
Cultural
Change
2
Chapter 2.indd 15 14 September 2022 12:03:07
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Social Change and Development in India
16
We saw in the last chapter how colonialism brought in changes that altered
the structure of Indian society. Industrialisation and urbanisation transformed
the lives of people. Factories replaced fields as places of work for some. Cities
replaced villages as places to live for many. Living and working arrangements
or structures changed. Changes also took place in culture, ways of life, norms,
values, fashions and even body language. Sociologists understand social
structure as a ‘continuing arrangement of persons in relationships defined
or controlled by institutions’ and ‘culture’ as ‘socially established norms or
patterns of behaviour’. You have already studied about the structural changes
that colonialism brought about in Chapter 1. You will observe how important
those structural changes are for understanding the cultural changes that this
chapter seeks to understand.
This chapter looks at two related developments, both a complex product of
the impact of colonial rule. The first deals with the deliberate and conscious
efforts made by the 19
th
century social reformers and early 20
th
century
nationalists to bring in changes in social practices that discriminated against
women and ‘lower’ castes. The second with the less deliberate yet decisive
changes in cultural practices that can broadly be understood as the four
processes of sanskritisation, modernisation, secularisation and westernisation.
Sanskritisation pre-dates the coming of colonial rule. The other three processes
can be understood better as complex responses of the people of India to the
changes that colonialism brought about.
2.1 Social reform movement S in the
19th and early 20th century You have already seen the far-
reaching impact of colonialism
on our lives. The social reform
movements which emerged in
India in the 19
th
century arose to
the challenges that colonial Indian
society faced. You probably are
familiar with what were termed
social evils that plagued Indian
society. The well-known issues
are that of sati, child marriage,
ban on widow remarriage and
caste discrimination. It is not that attempts were not made to fight social
discrimination in pre-colonial India. They were central to Buddhism, Bhakti
and Sufi movements. What marked these 19
th
century social reform attempts
was the modern context and mix of ideas. It was a creative combination of
modern ideas of western liberalism and a new look on traditional literature.
Raja Ram Mohun Roy Pandita Ramabai Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
Chapter 2.indd 16 14 September 2022 12:03:08
Reprint 2024-25
Cultural Change
17
Sociologist Satish Saberwal elaborates upon the modern context by
sketching three aspects to the modern framework of change in colonial India:
? modes of communication
? forms of organisation, and
? the nature of ideas
New technologies speeded up various forms of communication. The printing
press, telegraph, and later the microphone, movement of people and goods
through steamship and railways helped quick movement of new ideas. Within
India, social reformers from Punjab and Bengal exchanged ideas with reformers
from Madras and Maharashtra. Keshav Chandra Sen of Bengal visited Madras
in 1864. Pandita Ramabai travelled to different corners of the country. Some of
them went to other countries. Christian missionaries reached remote corners
of present day Nagaland, Mizoram and Meghalaya.
Modern social organisations like the Brahmo Samaj in Bengal and Arya
Samaj in Punjab were set up. The All-India Muslim Ladies Conference (Anjuman-
E-Khawatn-E-Islam) was founded in 1914. Indian reformers debated not just
in public meetings but through public media like newspapers and journals.
Translations of writings of social reformers from one Indian language to another
took place. For instance, Vishnu Shastri published a Marathi translation of
Vidyasagar’s book in Indu Prakash in 1868.
New ideas of liberalism and freedom, new ideas of homemaking and
marriage, new roles for mothers and daughters, new ideas of self-conscious
pride in culture and tradition emerged. The value of education became very
important. It was seen as very crucial for a nation to become modern but also
The mix of ideas
? Raja Ram Mohun Roy attacked the practice of sati on the basis of both appeals
to humanitarian and natural rights doctrines as well as Hindu shastras.
? Ranade’s writings entitled The T exts of the Hindu Law on the Lawfulness of the Remarriage
of Widows and Vedic Authorities for Widow Marriage elaborated the shastric sanction for
remarriage of widows.
? The content of new education was modernising and liberal. The literary content of the
courses in the humanities and social sciences was drawn from the literature of the European
Renaissance, Reformation and Enlightenment. Its themes were humanistic, secular and
liberal.
? Sir Syed Ahmed Khan’s interpretation of Islam emphasised the validity of free enquiry
(ijtihad) and the alleged similarities between Koranic revelations and the laws of nature
discovered by modern science.
? Kandukiri Viresalingam’s The Sources of Knowledge reflected his familiarity with navya-
nyaya logic. At the same time he translated the works of Julius Huxley, an eminent biologist.
Box 2.1
Chapter 2.indd 17 14 September 2022 12:03:08
Reprint 2024-25
Social Change and Development in India
18
retain its ancient heritage. The idea of female education was debated
intensely. Significantly, it was the social reformer Jotiba Phule who
opened the first school for women in Pune. Reformers argued that for a
society to progress women have to be educated. Some of them believed
that in pre-modern India, women were educated. Others contested this
on the grounds that this was so only of a privileged few. Thus attempts
to justify female education were made by recourse to both modern
and traditional ideas. They actively debated the meanings of tradition
and modernity. Jotiba Phule thus recalled the glory of pre-Aryan age
while others like Bal Gangadhar Tilak emphasised the glory of the
Aryan period. In other words, 19
th
century reform initiated a period of
questioning, reinterpretations
and both intellectual and
social growth.
The varied social reform
movements did have common
themes. Yet there were also
significant differences. For
some the concerns were
confined to the problems that
the upper caste, middle class
women and men faced. For
others the injustices suffered
by the discriminated castes
were central questions. For
some social evils had emerged
because of a decline of the true
spirit of Hinduism. For others
caste and gender oppression
was intrinsic to the religion.
Vidyasagar
Viresalingam
Jotiba Phule
Find out about some of the social
reformers mentioned below? What
issues did they fight for? How did
they conduct their campaign? Was
there any opposition?
? Viresalingam
? Pandita Ramabai
? Vidyasagar
? Dayanand Saraswati
? Jyotiba Phule
? Sri Narayan Guru
? Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
? Any other
Activity 2.1
Chapter 2.indd 18 14 September 2022 12:03:08
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Cultural Change
19
Likewise Muslim social reformers actively debated the meaning of polygamy and
purdah. For example, a resolution against the evils of polygamy was proposed by
Jahanara Shah Nawas at the All India Muslim Ladies Conference. She argued:
…the kind of polygamy which is practiced by certain sections of the Muslims is against
the true spirit of the Quran…and it is the duty of the educated women to exercise their
influence among the relations to put an end to this practice.
The resolution condemning polygamy caused considerable debate in the
Muslim press. Tahsib-e-Niswan, the leading journal for women in the Punjab,
came out in favour of the resolve, but others disapproved. (Chaudhuri 1993:
111). Debates within communities were common during this period. For
instance, sati was opposed by the Brahmo Samaj. Orthodox members of the
Hindu community in Bengal formed an organisation called Dharma Sabha
and petitioned the British arguing that reformers had no right to interpret
sacred texts.
2.2 d ifferent Kind S of Social c hange In this chapter each of the four concepts, namely sanskritisation, modernisation,
secularisation and westernisation, are dealt with in different sections. But as
the discussion unfolds, it will become obvious to
you that in many ways they overlap and in many
situations they co-exist. In many situations they
operate very differently. It is not surprising to
find the same person being modern in some ways
and traditional in another. This co-existence is
often seen as natural to India and many other
non-western countries.
But you know that sociology does not rest
content with naturalist explanation. (Recall the
discussion in Chapter 1, Class XI book - Introducing
Sociology. As the last chapter has shown colonial
modernity had its own paradoxes. Take the
example of western education. Colonialism led
to the growth of an English educated Indian
middle class. They read the thinkers of western
enlightenment, philosophers of liberal democracy
and dreamt of ushering in a liberal and progressive
India. And yet, humiliated by colonial rule they
asserted their pride in traditional learning and
scholarship. You have already seen this trend in
the 19
th
century reform movements.
As this chapter will show, modernity spelled not merely new ideas but also
rethinking and reinterpretation of tradition. Both culture and tradition are living
While you read the way the four processes are
used in sociology, it may be interesting to discuss
in class what you think the terms mean.
? What kind of behaviour would you define as:
Western
Modern
Secular
Sanskritised
? Why?
? Return to Activity 2.2 after you finish the
chapter.
? Did you find any difference between
common sense usage of the terms and
their sociological meaning?
Activity 2.2
Chapter 2.indd 19 14 September 2022 12:03:08
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