Sudhir, P., “British attitudes to Indian
nationalism, 1922-1935”, 1984, Ph.D. thesis, London,
School of Oriental and African Studies, 33-2535. Brief
summary.
“This thesis is essentially an analysis of
British attitudes towards Indian nationalism between 1922 and 1935. It rests
upon the argument that attitudes created paradigms of perception which
conditioned responses to events and situations and thus helped to shape the
contours of British policy in India.
Although resistant to change, attitudes could be and were altered and the
consequent paradigm shift facilitated political change…. The first chapter is
an introductory discussion of attitudes considered as ideological correlates of
imperialism. The second chapter deals with British views on the working of
dyarchy in India
and Indian demands for further reforms. British reactions to the rise of
militant nationalism and the controversy over the Simon Commission are analysed
in the third chapter. The fourth chapter is primarily an examination of the
responses to the first civil disobedience campaign and the Gandhi-Irwin Pact.
The fifth and sixth chapters analyse the debate on the White Paper, the
activities of some pressure groups, the role played by the State in moulding
public opinion, and the discussions leading up to the 1935 Act. The seventh …
chapter … sets out the conclusions….” From Author’s abstract