War, Famine, Riots, and the End of Empire
1939-1946
By
Janam Mukherjee
A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment
of the requirement for the degree of Doctor
of Philosophy
(Anthropology and History)
In the University of Michigan
2011
Doctoral Committee:
Professor Barbara D. Metcalf, Chair
Emeritus Professor David W. Cohen
Associate Professor Stuart Kirsch
Associate Professor Christi Merrill
, 1
"Unknown to me the wounds of the famine of 1943, the barbarities of war, the
horror of the communal riots of 1946 were impinging on my style and engraving
themselves on it, till there came a time when whatever I did, whether it was
chiseling a piece of wood, or burning metal with acid to create a gaping hole, or
cutting and tearing with no premeditated design, it would throw up innumerable
wounds, bodying forth a single theme - the figures of the deprived, the destitute
and the abandoned converging on us from all directions. The first chalk marks of
famine that had passed from the fingers to engrave themselves on the heart persist
indelibly."
Somnath Hore 2
1
Somnath Hore. "The Holocaust." Sculpture. Indian Writing, October 3, 2006. Web
(http://indianwriting.blogsome.com/2006/10/03/somnath-hore/) accessed 04/19/2011.
2
Quoted in N. Sarkar, p. 32
,© Janam S. Mukherjee
2011
, To my father
ii