Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T22:10:04.599Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Reordering a Border Space: Relief, rehabilitation, and nation-building in northeastern India after the 1950 Assam earthquake*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2015

BÉRÉNICE GUYOT-RÉCHARD*
Affiliation:
Emmanuel College and History Faculty, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Email: bcdg2@cam.ac.uk

Abstract

On 15 August 1950, just as India was celebrating its third independence anniversary, an earthquake of 8.6 magnitude struck the remote northeastern state of Assam and its surrounding borderlands. Rivers burst their banks and landslides blocked Himalayan valleys, destroying towns, villages, roads, fields, and tea gardens in their wake. Beyond the disaster's shattering impact on the physical geography of the region, this article explores how it participated in another reconfiguration—that of Assam's place within India's political geography and national imaginary. The Indian public had hitherto known very little about India's remote ‘northeast frontier’; the cataclysm and subsequent relief measures served to carve out a space for it on Indian mental maps. Simultaneously, by forcing a large-scale encounter between Indian authorities and the people of the scarcely controlled eastern Himalayas, post-earthquake relief and rehabilitation led to unprecedented state expansion in this newly strategic borderland. Yet in the same breath, the aftermath of the disaster fuelled stereotypes about Assam and its hinterland that would eventually further their marginality within India and undermine their continued unity. The crystallization of Assam's image as a place irreducibly subject to the whims of nature and, more importantly, incapable of taking care of itself (and hence, of its highland dependencies), would poison centre–state relations for decades to come. Imperfect and contradictory, the reordering of this border space from a colonial frontier to a component of independent India's national space did not end marginality, but instead reinforced it.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

This article benefited from the thoughtful comments of audiences at the Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati, and the University of Durham. I am also grateful to the anonymous reviewers for their comments.

References

1 ‘Eminent leader's sad end due to thrombosis of heart’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 7 August 1950; ‘All Assam in mourning: 20,000 people attend funeral of Sri Bardoloi at Gauhati’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 8 August 1950.

2 Nehru, Jawaharlal (circa 1985–). Letters to Chief Ministers, 1947–1964, Parthasarathi, G. (ed.), Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund, New DelhiGoogle Scholar; see letters for March–May 1950.

3 ‘Upper Assam cut off’, Times of India, 17 August 1950.

4 This corresponds to earthquakes of a magnitude higher than 7 on the Richter scale: 1906, 1908, 1918, 1923, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1943, 1947, and 1949. (Note that due to technologies available at the time, the stated magnitude of the earlier earthquakes is likely an approximation.) Due to the collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates and subduction in the Patkai range on the border with Burma, northeast India is one of the sixth most active regions in the world for earthquakes. Earthquake zoning maps of India place the entire region today called ‘Northeast India’ under Zone V, the area where the earthquake hazard is greatest. The only other parts of India to fall under that designation are the Rann of Kuch and small parts of Jammu and Kashmir, Uttarkhand, and Himachal Pradesh. See M. P. Tiwari (2002). Status of seismicity in Northeast India and earthquake disaster mitigation, ENVIS Bulletin: Himalayan Ecology and Development, vol. 10: http://www.scribd.com/doc/195500447/Status-of-Seismicity-in-the-Northeast-India-and-Earthquake-Disaster-Mitigation#scribd, [accessed 24 March 2015].

5 For more information, consult Government of Assam, Report on the earthquake of the 12th June 1897, so far as it affected the Province of Assam, Calcutta, 1897; Allen, Basil C., Assam District Gazetteer: Goalpara, vol. III, Baptist Mission Press, Calcutta, 1905, pp. 1013Google Scholar; Allen, Basil C., Assam District Gazetteer: Kamrup, vol. IV, Baptist Mission Press, Calcutta, 1905, pp. 1415Google Scholar; Moore, P. H., Twenty Years in Assam, or Leaves from my Journal, Omsons Publications, Guwahati, 1982 [1901], pp. 157–59Google Scholar; and Roy, Tirthankar, ‘State, society and market in the aftermath of natural disasters in colonial India: A preliminary exploration’, Indian Economic Social History Review, vol. 45:2, 2009, pp. 276–77Google Scholar.

6 Quoted in Bilham, Roger, ‘Tom La Touche and the Great Assam Earthquake of 12 June 1897: Letters from the epicenter’, Seismological Research Letters, vol. 79:3, 2008, pp. 426–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

7 Mary Thatcher (1979), Interview with Florence Meiklejohn on 17 July 1979 at the Centre of South Asian Studies, University of Cambridge: http://www.s-asian.cam.ac.uk/archive/audio/meiklejohn.html, [accessed 24 March 2015].

8 ‘Violent earthquake rocks Eastern India’, Times of India, 17 August 1950. In retrospect, it ranks as the tenth strongest earthquake since 1900. U.S. Geological Survey (2014). Largest earthquakes in the world since 1900: http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/world/10_largest_world.php, [accessed 24 March 2015].

9 ‘Assam earthquake released 1,000,000 times more energy than atom bomb’, The Assam Tribune, 28 April 1951.

10 See for instance ‘Upper Assam cut off’; and ‘River Dihang overruns towns of Upper Assam’, Times of India, 21 August 1950.

11 Clancey, Gregory K., ‘The Meiji earthquake: Nature, nation, and the ambiguities of catastrophe’, Modern Asian Studies, vol. 40:4, 2006, pp. 911–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12 Roy, State, Society and Market, p. 264.

13 Clancey, ‘The Meiji earthquake’, p. 917.

14 Borland, Janet, ‘Capitalising on catastrophe: Reinvigorating the Japanese state with moral values through education following the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake’, Modern Asian Studies, vol. 40:4, 2006, p. 875CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

15 Clancey, Gregory K., Earthquake Nation: the Cultural Politics of Japanese Seismicity, 1868–1930, University of California Press, Berkeley, California, 2006, p. 4CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

16 Clancey, Earthquake Nation, Chapter 2.

17 Simpson, Edward and Corbridge, Stuart, ‘The geography of things that may become memories: the 2001 earthquake in Kachchh-Gujarat and the politics of rehabilitation in the pre-memorial era’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 96:3, 2006, pp. 566–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Simpson, Edward, The Political Biography of an Earthquake: Aftermath and Amnesia in Gujarat, London, Hurst, 2014Google Scholar.

18 Clancey, Earthquake Nation, p. 4.

19 ‘Our eastern frontier: Its safety and its service’, S.No.11, Sri Prakasa Papers, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library [hereafter NMML], New Delhi.

20 Misra, Sanghamitra, Becoming a Borderland: the Politics of Space and Identity in Colonial North-eastern India, Routledge, New Delhi, 2011, p. 1Google Scholar. Note that this characterization should not create assumptions of Assam as a functioning, harmonious melting pot. Misra and others have explored the competing and contested identity narratives that flourished in Assam in the colonial period and continue to do so today, for instance: an ‘Assamese’ drive to make the history of Assam congruent with the history of Assamese-speaking people (Sharma, Jayeeta, Empire's Garden: Assam and the Making of India, Permanent Black, Ranikhet, 2011CrossRefGoogle Scholar); the resistance of Goalpara's inhabitants to attempts to standardize their oral and literary tradition under ‘Assamese’ (Misra, Sanghamitra, ‘Redrawing frontiers: Language, resistance and the imagining of a Goalparia people’, Indian Economic and Social History Review, vol. 43:2, 2006, pp. 199225CrossRefGoogle Scholar); or the current affirmation of an Ahom identity in Upper Assam (Saikia, Yasmin, Fragmented Memories: Struggling to Be Tai-Ahom in India, Duke University Press, Durham, North Carolina, 2004CrossRefGoogle Scholar).

21 Misra, Becoming a Borderland, p. 12.

22 Robb, Peter, ‘The colonial state and constructions of Indian identity: an example on the Northeast frontier in the 1880s’, Modern Asian Studies, vol. 31:2, 1997, p. 250CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

23 Ludden, David, ‘Spatial inequity and national territory: Remapping 1905 in Bengal and Assam’, Modern Asian Studies, vol. 46:3, 2012, p. 19CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

24 Guha, Amalendu, Planter Raj to Swaraj: Freedom Struggle and Electoral Politics in Assam, 1826–1947, 2nd edn, Indian Council of Historical Research, New Delhi, 2006Google Scholar.

25 This was partly for linguistic reasons, as Assamese and Bengali belong to the same language and both use the Eastern Nagari script, and partly for historical reasons—the Raj having wrested Assam from the Burmese largely to protect Bengal. Until the late nineteenth century, the region had come under the Bengal Presidency and vernacular schools were in Bengali. Even after its constitution as a separate province in 1874 and the founding of Assamese-speaking schools, Bengali-speakers (predominantly based in the heavily populated Sylhet District) were the largest community in Assam. For more information, see Barpujari, H. K., Political History of Assam, vol. I: 18261919, Government of Assam, Guwahati, 1977Google Scholar; and Bhuyan, Arun Chandra, Political History of Assam, vol. II: 19201939, Government of Assam, Guwahati, 1978Google Scholar.

26 See Guha, Planter Raj to Swaraj; and Ludden, ‘Remapping 1905 in Bengal and Assam’.

27 Sharma, Empire's Garden.

28 Kar, Boddhisattva, What is in a Name? Politics of Spatial Imagination in Colonial Assam, Omeo Kumar Das Institute of Social Change and Development, Guwahati, 2004, pp. 2036Google Scholar.

29 See for instance politician Tarun Ram Phookan's opening address to the 1926 AICC (All India Congress Committee) Gauhati session, which stressed Assam's ties with, and contribution to, the Indian civilization. Zaidi, A. M. and Zaidi, S. (eds), Encyclopaedia of the Indian National Congress, vol. IX: 1925–29: India demands independence, S. Chand, New Delhi, 1980, pp. 95103Google Scholar. Assam prime minister, Gopinath Bardoloi's address to the same body 23 years later echoes it strongly. Speech delivered at the AICC session of May 1949 in Dehra Dun, S.No.1, Gopinath Bardoloi Papers (1930–50), NMML, New Delhi.

30 Kar, What's in a Name?, p. 21.

31 The border with West Bengal is approximately 65 kilometres wide, whereas the seven states share 5,087 kilometres of borders with Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, and Burma. For more information on these international borders, see Ministry of Development of North-Eastern Region (n.d.). International Border, Look East Policy vis-à-vis NER: http://www.mdoner.gov.in/node/202, [accessed 24 March 2015].

32 Government of India (1947), Syed Muhammad Saadulla's address, Session of Friday 18 July 1947, Constituent Assembly Debates (Proceedings) 1946–50, vol. IV: 14–31 July 1947, p. 682: http://parliamentofindia.nic.in/ls/debates/debates.htm [accessed 11 January 2014].

33 ‘Road communications in Assam being restored’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 25 August 1950; Donald F. Thomas, ‘The quake—and after: the task that confronts Assam’, Times of India, 14 September 1950.

34 Lok Sabha statement by Nehru, reported in ‘Indo-Tibetan boundary: “No change to be permitted”’, Times of India, 21 November 1950.

35 ‘90 pc of buildings badly damaged’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 19 August 1950.

36 ‘Widespread devastation by earthquake in Assam’, Times of India, 20 August 1950.

37 ‘Road communications in Assam being restored’.

38 ‘Assam tea gardens face ruin’, Times of India, 24 August 1950. Provisional estimates indicated a loss of Rs. 20,000,000 for Assam's industries. Donald F. Thomas, ‘The ’quake—and after: the task that confronts Assam’, Times of India, 14 September 1950.

39 ‘Procurement in Assam: “Position critical”’, Times of India, 29 August 1950.

40 ‘Assam ’quake havoc: loss estimated at Rs10 crores’, Times of India, 26 August 1950.

41 Jawaharlal Nehru (1993). ‘Help to victims of the earthquake’ (Broadcast to the Nation over AIR, 9 September 1950), in Gopal, Sarvepalli, Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru—Second Series, vol. XV, Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund, New Delhi, pp. 166–70Google Scholar.

42 Proceeding Books of APCC Meetings (29 August 1950–31 December 1955), S.No.25, Assam Pradesh Congress Committee Papers [hereafter APCC Papers], NMML, New Delhi; and APCC Proceedings 1935–55, Reel 3599, APCC Papers, NMML, New Delhi.

43 See these letters to the Times of India editor: ‘Assam and the Congress’, Times of India, 6 September 1950; ‘To the editor (by B.H. Daroowalla)’, Times of India, 12 September 1950; and ‘Earthquake relief’, Times of India, 15 September 1950.

44 See for instance Barnett, Michael N., Empire of Humanity: a History of Humanitarianism, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York, 2011Google Scholar; and Cohen, Gerard Daniel, In War's Wake: Europe's Displaced Persons in the Postwar Order, Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York, 2012Google Scholar.

45 Contribution of Rs. 5,000 to the Assam Relief Fund by the Indian Association of Djibouti through the Commission for the Government of India in Aden (1950), 1(13)-AWT, External Affairs Proceedings, National Archives of India [hereafter NAI], New Delhi; Sympathies extended by the Emperor of Ethiopia on his behalf and the people of Ethiopia towards the Assam earthquake sufferers. Contributions by Indian community in Addis Ababa (1950), 22–32-AFR-I, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi.

46 See respectively, Offers of assistance from Burma towards Assam relief (1950), 48–129-BI, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi; Enquiry by the United States of America through Indian Embassy, Washington regarding immediate help in kind needed for the victims of the earthquake in Assam (1950), 154-NEF, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi; Watnumull Foundation of San Francisco. Offer of help for the Assam earthquake victims (1950), 155-NEF, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi; Resolution in the United Nations Organisation regarding sympathy for the victims of earthquake in Assam. Enquiry from Secretary General of UNO regarding requirements which could be met by UN and other specialised agencies (1950), 151-NEF, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi; and Contribution for Assam Relief Fund by Aden (1951), 1(6)-AWT, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi. Almost none of the files regarding the earthquake have been transferred, unfortunately (including those giving a summary of all the relief offered). However, it is known that the American government offered to send six tons of emergency relief supplies and 427,431 tons of foodgrains at concessional prices. Nehru, Letters to Chief Ministers, p. 210.

47 Offer of contribution for relief from the Prime Minister's Relief Fund and 10,000 maunds of rice by Pakistani Prime Minister from East Pakistan, 1950, 142-NEF, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi.

48 Uma Shankar (1973), Interview with Dr. Naik on 1 May 1973 at the Centre of South Asian Studies, University of Cambridge: http://www.s-asian.cam.ac.uk/archive/audio/naikd.html [accessed 24 March 2015].

49 Jawaharlal Nehru, The Discovery of India, Meridian Books, n.p., 1945.

50 Kar, Boddhisattva, ‘When was the postcolonial? A history of policing impossible lines’, in Baruah, Sanjib, Beyond Counter-insurgency: Breaking the Impasse in Northeast India, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2009, pp. 5152Google Scholar.

51 In reality, the small settlement of Walong. Thomas, ‘The quake—and after’.

52 ‘Brahmaputra water turns black’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 20 August 1950.

53 ‘Quake affects two-thirds of Assam people: Entire hills inhabited by the Abors subside’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 26 August 1950; ‘Mountain chains said to have vanished’, Times of India, 29 August 1950.

54 Nehru, Letters to Chief Ministers, pp. 196–97.

55 Kingdon-Ward, Francis, Frank Kingdon-Ward's ‘Riddle of the Tsangpo Gorges’: Retracing the Epic Journey of 1924–25 in South-East Tibet, Cox, Kenneth (ed.), 2nd edn, additional material by Kenneth Cox, Kenneth Storm, Jr. and Ian Baker, Garden Art Press, Woodbridge, 2008 [1926]Google Scholar.

56 Kingdon-Ward, Francis, ‘The Assam earthquake of 1950’, The Geographical Journal, vol. 119:2, 1953, p. 169CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

57 Kingdon-Ward, ‘The Assam earthquake of 1950’, p. 172.

58 A copy is preserved at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, in Delhi.

59 The Times of India thus reviewed Kingdon-Ward's frequent books almost without fail, eagerly published reports of his explorations, and promoted his regular pieces for the Illustrated Weekly of India as a big selling point in its adverts for the magazine. See for instance ‘People with a strange dialect: Assam border of Tibet’, The Times of India, 9 February 1934; ‘Display Ad 7’, The Times of India, 21 July 1933; and ‘Tibetan plants for museum: Rich collection’, The Times of India, 22 April 1936.

60 ‘Governor's Fund opened: Sri Daulatram's appeal for aid to earthquake sufferers of Assam’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 23 August 1950. Emphasis added.

61 Roy, State, Society and Market, p. 264.

62 Sadiya District Congress Committee (1950–54), Packet 14 File 1, APCC Papers, NMML, New Delhi.

63 Confidential reports on the NEFA (1952–44), S.No.111, Verrier Elwin Papers, NMML, New Delhi, ff. 6–7.

64 Tarun Kumar Bhattacharjee, The Frontier Trail, Manick Bandyopadhyay, Calcutta, 1993, p. 7.

65 Kingdon-Ward, The Assam Earthquake of 1950.

66 Sharma, Sanjay, Famine, Philanthropy and the Colonial State: North India in the Early Nineteenth Century, Oxford University Press, Delhi, Oxford, 2001CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

67 Roy, State, Society and Market.

68 David Hall-Matthews, ‘Famines in (South) Asia’, History Compass, vol. 2, 2004, pp. 1–5.

69 Chatterji, Joya, The Spoils of Partition: Bengal and India, 1947–1967, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2007CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Zamindar, Vazira Fazila-Yacoobali, The Long Partition and the Making of Modern South Asia: Refugees, Boundaries, Histories, Columbia University Press, New York, 2007Google Scholar; Uditi Sen, ‘Refugees and the politics of nation-building in India, 1947–1971’, PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 2009.

70 Question in Parliament of India by Shri Kamath regarding Assam earthquake, 1950, 15/87-Public, Home Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi.

71 Bhattacharjee, The Frontier Trail, p. 35. See also ‘Subansiri River back to its course’, Times of India, 1 September 1950.

72 ‘Relief activity in Abor Hills District’, The Assam Tribune, 7 February 1951.

73 S.No.111, Verrier Elwin Papers, NMML.

74 S.No.111, Verrier Elwin Papers, NMML.

75 R. N. Koley (circa 1997). East Siang in the Last Fifty Years (1947–1997), East Siang District administration, Pasighat.

76 Tribal Areas of Assam. Expenditure on projects (1950), 146-NEF, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi, Doulatram to Keskar, 15 August 1950.

77 Tour Diary of Assistant Political Officer Lohit, B. C. Bhuyan (1950), GA-12/50, NEFA Secretariat, Arunachal Pradesh State Archives [hereafter APSA], Itanagar.

78 Malaria protection for the hill tribes coming down to the plains and plan for anti-malarial measures (1951), M/94/51, NEFA Secretariat, APSA, Itanagar.

79 Occupation of Tawang, earthquake relief measures by Major Khathing's party (1951), CGA/56/51, NEFA Secretariat, APSA, Itanagar.

80 List of administrative centres in NEFA (1958), P66/58, NEFA Secretariat, APSA, Itanagar.

81 CGA/56/51, NEFA Secretariat, APSA.

82 ‘Assam Rifles post at Walong was set up in 1944’, Assam Tribune, 15 November 1962; ‘The Himalayan frontier: I—Background of quiet’, Times of India, 22 November 1950.

83 G. E. Walker, ‘Blueprint for Sadiya: a post-war reconstruction plan for Sadiya Frontier Tract’, 1945, Mss Eur D1191/11, Miscellaneous papers relating to the Northeast Frontier of India, British Library [hereafter BL], London.

84 Bhattacharjee, The Frontier Trail, pp. 64–66.

85 Guha, Ramachandra, Savaging the Civilized: Verrier Elwin, His Tribals, and India, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2001Google Scholar.

86 Elwin, Verrier, A Philosophy for NEFA. With a Foreword by the Prime Minister of India, North-East Frontier Agency Administration, Shillong, 1957, p. 11Google Scholar (paraphrasing Nehru).

87 Nehru, Jawaharlal, ‘The problems facing India’, in Gopal, Sarvepalli, Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru—Second Series, Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund, New Delhi, 1993, pp. 828Google Scholar (speech at a public meeting in Delhi on Gandhi's birth anniversary, 2 October 1950, original in Hindi).

88 A preliminary report of the Assam earthquake by M. C. Poddar, Geologist, Geological Survey of India (1951), 7/2-Public, Home Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi. Emphasis added.

89 ‘Building anew’, Times of India, 14 September 1950.

90 Barua, Hem, The Fearless Democrat: Hem Barua, Kumar Das, Deepak (ed.), Bhabani Print and Publications, Guwahati, 2010, p. 38Google Scholar.

91 ‘30-mile belt under water: Brahmaputra in heavy flood’, Times of India, 7 July 1955; ‘Part of Assam trunk road washed away’, Times of India, 1 July 1956; ‘Brahmaputra fast eating up Palasbari in Assam: Town with population of 5000 to be abandoned by state govt’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 11 July 1956; ‘Patrika-Jugantar Assam Flood Relief Fund’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 30 July 1959; ‘Assam flood hits people hard’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 19 August 1959.

92 E. P. Gee, ‘The Brahmaputra Valley is changing: Nature's mutilation and Man's mistakes’, The Assam Tribune, 7 October 1951.

93 See for example ‘Brahmaputra erosion threatens Dibrugarh Town’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 17 July 1954; ‘Brahmaputra now a “river of grief”’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 18 August 1954.

94 Nehru, Jawaharlal, ‘Floods in Assam’ (Statement in Parliament, 13 November 1952), in Gopal, Sarvepalli, Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru—Second Series, vol. XX, Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund, New Delhi, 1997, pp. 265–67Google Scholar.

95 Kingdon-Ward, Francis, ‘Aftermath of the great Assam earthquake of 1950’, The Geographical Journal, vol. 121:3, 1955, p. 302CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

96 Kar, Boddhisattva, ‘The Assam fever: Identities of a disease and diseases of an identity’, in Bhattacharya, Debraj, Of Matters Modern: the Experience of Modernity in Colonial and Post-Colonial South Asia, Seagull Books, Calcutta, 2008, pp. 78125Google Scholar.

97 Nag, Sajal, Pied Pipers in the Hills: Bamboo Flowers, Rat Famine and Colonial Philanthropy in North East India, 1881–1931, Centre of South Asian Studies, University of Cambridge, 2008Google Scholar.

98 See for instance Pollok, Fitz William Thomas and Thom, W. S., Wild Sports of Burma and Assam, Hurst and Blackett, London, 1900Google Scholar; and Nicolls, Frank, Assam Shikari: a Tea Planter's Story of Hunting and High Adventure in the Jungles of North East India, Tonson, Auckland, 1970Google Scholar.

99 ‘Rendez-vous with rhino’, The Statesman, 13 April 1952.

100 Kingdon-Ward may partly be forgiven for this—his was, after all, an article for a geographical journal, and the highly atomized social structure of Mishmi society, led this tribe to live in hamlets of just a couple of houses often miles apart from one another. Nevertheless, there was still ample proof of human presence on the Indian side of the border, for instance at Walong. Instead, Kingdon-Ward's account only emphasizes human presence and suffering in relation to areas on the other side of the Indo-Tibetan border.

101 ‘Earthquake and flood: Operation rescue’, The Assam Tribune, 14 July 1951.

102 See for instance ‘Agreed decision on certain incidents in Border Areas’, Amrita Bazar Patrika, 13 August 1949; ‘We are sentinel at gates of India and defender of borders: Governor's independence message to people of Assam’, The Assam Tribune, 17 August 1949; and ‘Alleged encroachment of the Indian Territory on the Assam frontier by Pakistan’ (1949), 5(9)-Pak III, External Affairs Proceedings, NAI, New Delhi.

103 S.No.113, Sri Prakasa Papers, NMML.

104 See Ministry of Home Affairs and Ministry of Finance notes of 6 and 11 December 1950, respectively, in 15/87-Public, Home Affairs Proceedings, NAI.

105 ‘Editorial—Refugees’, The Assam Tribune, 8 July 1951.

106 15/87-Public, Home Affairs Proceedings, NAI.

107 ‘Constructive efforts and not mutual accusation’, The Assam Tribune, 19 July 1951.

108 Thomas, ‘The ’quake—and after’.

109 Allen, Assam District Gazetteers; Rustomji, Nari, Imperilled Frontiers: India's North-eastern Borderlands, Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1983, p. 10Google Scholar; Sharma, Jayeeta, ‘“Lazy” natives, coolie labour, and the Assam tea industry’, Modern Asian Studies, vol. 43:6, 2009, pp. 12871324CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

110 Patel, Vallabhbhai, ‘No time for grieving (Speech given at a public meeting in Shillong on 2 January 1948)’, in Grover, Verinder, Political Thinkers of Modern India, Deep and Deep, 1993, New Delhi, p. 61Google Scholar.

111 Zaidi and Zaidi (eds), Encyclopaedia of the Indian National Congress.

112 Nehru, Letters to Chief Ministers, pp. 212–13.

113 Nehru, Jawaharlal, Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru—Second Series, vol. XVI, Gopal, Sarvepalli (ed.), Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund, New Delhi, 1994, p. 346Google Scholar.

114 ‘Nehru did not bid farewell to Assam in 1962!’, The Assam Tribune, 12 December 2010.

115 See for example Bhaumik, Subir, Troubled Periphery: Crisis of India's North-East, Sage Publications, New Delhi, 2009, p. 327CrossRefGoogle Scholar: ‘Fifty years after partition, India's north-east remains the stepchild of the republic. The kind of attention lavished on Kashmir is nonexistent there, though in terms of resources the North-East is far ahead.’

116 Misra, Udayon, The Periphery Strikes Back: Challenges to the Nation-state in Assam and Nagaland, Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Shimla, 2000Google Scholar.

117 See editions of the Amrita Bazar Patrika for August 1950, for instance ‘Road communications in Assam being restored’.

118 ‘Relief activity in Abor Hills District’.

119 Bérénice Guyot-Réchard, ‘Decolonisation and State-Making on India's North-Eastern Frontier, c1943–62’, PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 2013.

120 Clancey, ‘The Meiji earthquake’.

121 Ludden, David, ‘The process of empire: Frontiers and borderlands’, in Bayly, Christopher and Bang, Peter Fibiger, Tributary Empires in Global History, Palgrave Macmillan, New Delhi, 2011, p. 133Google Scholar.

122 The best introduction to the subject is Baruah, Sanjib, Durable Disorder: Understanding the Politics of Northeast India, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2007CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

123 For example, Baruah, Sanjib, India Against Itself: Assam and the Politics of Nationality, University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1999Google Scholar; Misra, The Periphery Strikes Back; Nag, Sajal, Contesting Marginality: Ethnicity, Insurgency and Subnationalism in North-East India, Manohar, New Delhi, 2002Google Scholar.

124 See for instance Menon, Dilip M., ‘Lost visions? Imagining a national culture in the 1950s’, in Thorner, Alice, Land, Labour and Rights: Ten Daniel Thorner Memorial Lectures, Anthem, London, 2002, pp. 250–68Google Scholar; Zachariah, Benjamin, Developing India: an Intellectual and Social History, c.1930–50, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2005CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

125 Zou, David Vumlallian and Kumar, M. Satish, ‘Mapping a colonial borderland: Objectifying the geo-body of India's Northeast’, Journal of Asian Studies, vol. 70:1, 2011, pp. 141–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

126 Haokip, Thongkholal, ‘Conceptualising Northeast India: a discursive analysis on diversity’, Bangladesh e-Journal of Sociology, vol. 8:11, 2011, p. 111Google Scholar.

127 Misra, Becoming a Borderland, p. 12.

128 Chakrabarty, Dipesh, Majumdar, Rochona and Sartori, Andrew (eds), From the Colonial to the Postcolonial: India and Pakistan in Transition, Oxford University Press, Oxford, New Delhi, 2007Google Scholar.

129 Ludden, ‘The process of empire’.