Try GOLD - Free

English's place in history is not black and white

Mint Mumbai

|

December 13, 2025

In 1784, two white men joined forces to establish an English school in Thanjavur, Tamil Nadu.

- Manu S. Pillai

English's place in history is not black and white

John Sullivan was British representative at the court of the local rajah, while C.F. Schwartz was a missionary who had long worked in India.In promoting English education, they had, of course, specific goals. Sullivan lamented how British officials depended on “self-seeking dubashes” (interpreters) for business. If the “principal natives” took to English, however, these pesky middlemen could be eliminated. What attracted Schwartz, meanwhile, was that Western education offered to break the “obstinate attachment” Indians had to their religion, helping the “diffusion of Christianity”. Higher-ups in London agreed. For them, English instruction promised one more advantage: the infusing of “native minds” with “respect for the British nation”. On the face of it, this was a perfect “win-win”. Except that these figures didn’t factor in a key element: the motivations of Indians themselves.

India’s engagement with English has been much in the news lately. This follows a recent speech by the Prime Minister, in which he cited the infamous Lord Macaulay and his colonial-era effort to evidently “uproot Bharat from its own foundation” by creating a class of Indians brown in colour but white in spirit. The result, the Prime Minister added, was a “sense of inferiority” about all things Indian, with a mindless aping of the West, and a devaluing of local languages. To a serious extent this is true, in that English and what it represents did acquire—and still holds—tremendous power in our country. There remain, for example, patrician clubs where the dress code frowns on kurta-pyjamas and admits brogues but not Kolhapuri slippers. Fifty years after independence, similarly, Salman Rushdie could claim that “Indian writers working in English” were producing “more important” work than those writing in our bhashas—a comment that has definitely not aged well.

MORE STORIES FROM Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

Digital insurer Acko preps for IPO, eyes $300-400 mn raise

Acko, a digital insurer backed by private equity firms including General Atlantic and Multiples Alternate Asset Management, has begun prepping for an initial public offering (IPO) to raise $300-400 million, according to two people close to the development.

time to read

2 mins

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

The eerie parallels between AI mania and the dot-com bubble

Is it karma?

time to read

4 mins

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Messy pricing

A simple market rule-of-thumb has long taken hold. If demand for something vastly exceeds supply, price it-so that those willing to pay or outbid others get the privilege.

time to read

1 min

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

How ‘The New Yorker’ embodied the elite but survived

In a Netflix documentary that celebrates one hundred years of The New Yorker magazine, its staff writer Andrew Marantz, says that he has often been in places where people would say “All you elite [expletive], you don’t know the first thing” about America.

time to read

4 mins

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

From Hrithik to Kajol, Bollywood joins office party

Bollywood celebrities are known for investing in residential properties.

time to read

3 mins

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

'India needs more credit to be developed by 2047'

India needs to extend the reach of credit in the economy to become a developed nation by 2047, even as companies increasingly move away from traditional bank financing, top bankers said at Mint’s BFSI Conclave.

time to read

3 mins

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Why is RBI wary of stablecoin, the 'stable' crypto?

For years, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has flagged concerns over cryptocurrencies. Now, deputy governor T. Rabi Sankar has singled out stablecoins, warning that even this supposedly safer crypto corner carries systemic risks. Mint explores this asset class, and the caution.

time to read

2 mins

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

HOW TO LOSE MONEY: 2025 EDITION

For retail investors, the present market calls for balance rather than bravado

time to read

9 mins

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai

GST cuts spark SUV sales boom, small cars struggle

The trend comes amid an intensifying tussle over emission norms for small cars

time to read

3 mins

December 15, 2025

Mint Mumbai

Some ghosts from 2025 will haunt us in 2026 as well

As the year draws to a close, tradition demands that General Disequilibrium provide a perspective on the year gone by.

time to read

3 mins

December 15, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size