Revision as of 03:29, 5 September 2007 editAbecedare (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators33,231 edits →Ridiculous. Really.: comment← Previous edit | Revision as of 03:47, 5 September 2007 edit undoSarvagnya (talk | contribs)9,152 edits →Ridiculous. Really.: cNext edit → | ||
Line 1,004: | Line 1,004: | ||
:Sarvagnya, article talk pages are meant for discussion of proposed changes to article content, and the way F&f and Rueben have done so '''''with references''''' is worthy of emulation rather than derision. Yes, I agree that the above discussion (as all others!) would have benefited with greater assumption of good faith, and less commentary on editor conduct (as opposed to article content), but overall I think the accumulation of references was very useful for this immediate debate as well as for future reference. Of course, you, I and all others are welcome to add our own reliable sources to the mix, but deleting productive discussion wouldn't be advisable IMO. Regards. ] 03:29, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | :Sarvagnya, article talk pages are meant for discussion of proposed changes to article content, and the way F&f and Rueben have done so '''''with references''''' is worthy of emulation rather than derision. Yes, I agree that the above discussion (as all others!) would have benefited with greater assumption of good faith, and less commentary on editor conduct (as opposed to article content), but overall I think the accumulation of references was very useful for this immediate debate as well as for future reference. Of course, you, I and all others are welcome to add our own reliable sources to the mix, but deleting productive discussion wouldn't be advisable IMO. Regards. ] 03:29, 5 September 2007 (UTC) | ||
::'Discussing' something is not the same as defecating all over the talk page. Can you imagine somebody walking in now and trying to make sense of what is going on? This was supposed to be a RfC and one can hardly make any sense of what people are saying! Its hard to even make out where a comment starts and where it ends! This type of 'discussing' has the potential to put off and drive away well meaning and knowledgeable editors. If you have references, just wrap them in a <nowiki><ref></nowiki> tag and be done. If its on google books or somewhere, provide a link. People are savvy enough to click on a link when they see one. Quoting passage after passage verbatim from book after book is perhaps even a vio of copyright. This is NOT 'discussion'.. this ''is'' ]. And like Rueben points out, he tops off all this with apalling doses of bad faith and snobbery. ] 03:47, 5 September 2007 (UTC) |
Revision as of 03:47, 5 September 2007
Skip to table of contents |
India is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has been identified as one of the best articles produced by the Misplaced Pages community. Even so, if you can update or improve it, please do so. | |||||||||||||
This article appeared on Misplaced Pages's Main Page as Today's featured article on December 3, 2004. | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Current status: Featured article |
This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the India article. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
|
Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
Archives: Index, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60 |
This article has not yet been rated on Misplaced Pages's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||
Please add the quality rating to the {{WikiProject banner shell}} template instead of this project banner. See WP:PIQA for details.
|
Archives |
Index 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 |
- The article is written in summary style in Indian English.
- All sections are a summary of more detailed articles. If you find any points missing, please add it in the section's main article rather than on this page to keep this page size within reasonable limits.
- Only external links pertaining to India as a whole are solicited here. Please add other links in the most appropriate article.
- India-related matters should be discussed at Misplaced Pages:Notice board for India-related topics.
- See the FAQ section before posting a topic on the page.
Bose and the history section
Reuben Iys has lately been trying to supplement the history section with his version of Subhash Bose's contribution to the freedom struggle. There is an idiosyncratic version of recent Indian history out there, which assigns to Bose a lion's share of the credit for liberating India from the British. This has been discussed on this page many times before. Bose has of late been championed even by the Hindu right, in part because he is a convenient counterfoil to Gandhi. In fact, Bose was never thought of contemporaneously as being anywhere on the right, his "alliances" with Hitler, the Italian Fascists, and the Imperial Japanese notwithstanding. His followers in the Congress party (when he was still in the Congress) formed what was considered the "left wing" of the Congress. After he broke with the Indian National Congress, he formed the Forward Block party, which, (after his death and) for many years after independence, sided with the various Communist parties on most issues in the Indian parliament. Among, mainstream historians, as has been pointed out on these pages before, the consensus is that the various students groups that arose in response to the Quit India Resolution and the various communist and labor parties that drew many new recruits during the years 1942-46, caused more nervousness among the British than Bose ever did. If a consensus decision is made to revise the "freedom struggle" subsection, then those groups will need to be mentioned long before Bose makes an appearance. Such a major re-interpretation needs to be discussed here (and a consensus arrived around it) before it can be introduced into the history section. I will add a link to a previous discussion to Bose on the pages soon. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 14:08, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
- PS Here is the link. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 14:17, 22 August 2007 (UTC).
- I do not wish to champion Bose. What I do wish to do is to point out that there was more than one movement and philosophy in the freddom movement, and the movement did not start in 1920s (thats factually wrong). Also the fact that a number of defining movements arose especially in the last decade of the freedom movement, of which one very strong one was the Quit India, and the other was the Indian National Army. After the war, the British Indian armed forces stopped supporting the Raj's efforts, and the mutinies it inspired were a very strong factor, which even the Congress expolited at the time/ The version of the movement that we see today in India is a very narrow and enclosed version that only talks of Congress and Gandhi, whereas there's more to it than that. I do not have any interest in making Bose a hero, but I have read a lot on this in the last two years (I will reference this a number of authorities of history if you wish) that the ultimate death nail was not the Quit India but the swaying of the alleigance of the armed forces. Also the old version makes a point not to say anything about any event, movement or views before, during or after Gandhi, which gives a wrong impression. The independence movement existed long before Gandhi arrived. In fact a reason why the Amritsar massacre happened was because the British were jumpy after the 1915 Ghadar conspiracy. Please dont look at this as a PoV edit, because its not. I wish this page on India not to be a political statement (particularly in the History section), but to give a complete and true picture (as much as possible). By all means, you have to have a balanced view, but that would mean a different version of the movement than was there earlier. Regarding old discussions, I haven't seen this discussion in the archive. And I dont know who you're claiming as main stream historians. But I have personal correspondence opinions and published accounts of a number of eminent historians that I am sure will prove point.Rueben lys 21:47, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
- This article is about the Republic of India. The history section is highly compressed with exactly two sentences devoted to the Indian freedom struggle.
- I do not wish to champion Bose. What I do wish to do is to point out that there was more than one movement and philosophy in the freddom movement, and the movement did not start in 1920s (thats factually wrong). Also the fact that a number of defining movements arose especially in the last decade of the freedom movement, of which one very strong one was the Quit India, and the other was the Indian National Army. After the war, the British Indian armed forces stopped supporting the Raj's efforts, and the mutinies it inspired were a very strong factor, which even the Congress expolited at the time/ The version of the movement that we see today in India is a very narrow and enclosed version that only talks of Congress and Gandhi, whereas there's more to it than that. I do not have any interest in making Bose a hero, but I have read a lot on this in the last two years (I will reference this a number of authorities of history if you wish) that the ultimate death nail was not the Quit India but the swaying of the alleigance of the armed forces. Also the old version makes a point not to say anything about any event, movement or views before, during or after Gandhi, which gives a wrong impression. The independence movement existed long before Gandhi arrived. In fact a reason why the Amritsar massacre happened was because the British were jumpy after the 1915 Ghadar conspiracy. Please dont look at this as a PoV edit, because its not. I wish this page on India not to be a political statement (particularly in the History section), but to give a complete and true picture (as much as possible). By all means, you have to have a balanced view, but that would mean a different version of the movement than was there earlier. Regarding old discussions, I haven't seen this discussion in the archive. And I dont know who you're claiming as main stream historians. But I have personal correspondence opinions and published accounts of a number of eminent historians that I am sure will prove point.Rueben lys 21:47, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
“ | During the first half of the twentieth century, a nationwide struggle for independence was launched by the Indian National Congress and other political organisations. Millions of protesters engaged in mass campaigns of civil disobedience with a commitment to ahimsa, or non-violence, led by Mahatma Gandhi. | ” |
- No one is saying that the Indian freedom struggle was monolithic, but simply that in a compressed section only certain things can be mentioned and choices have to be made. Bose's contribution is simply not notable enough to merit mention. As I mention above, the 2007 Encyclopaedia Britannica, for example, devotes 19 long pages to the Indian freedom movement and has this to say about Bose:
Expand to see quotes from Britannica article on Indian History by Stanley Wolpert: | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
- That is not the description of a signal role in the freedom struggle. This is not just the view of Indian historians, it is the mainstream view. The Britannica article, for example, is written by Stanley Wolpert who is hardly an "Indian nationalist" and whose Nine Hours to Rama was banned in India for many years. Again the Indian freedom struggle has a total of two sentences in the compressed history section and only Gandhi is mentioned by name, Nehru isn't, Tilak isn't, Gokhale isn't, Lajpat Rai isn't, Dadabhoy Nairoji isn't, Patel isn't, Jinnah isn't, Suhrawardy isn't, ... why then Bose? If Britannica's signed history section devotes one unflattering paragraph to Bose out of a total of 19 long pages on the Indian freedom struggle, why should we give seven sentences to Bose out a total outlay of two? Fowler&fowler«Talk» 22:17, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
You're saying in you're first line that
“ | No one is saying that the Indian freedom struggle was monolithic, but simply that in a compressed section only certain things can be mentioned and choices have to be made. | ” |
, yet that is exactly what you're version is saying. You're insisting that the version be compressed enough not to include anything but the Congress's role in the freedom movement, and the version is essentially starting and ending with the Gandhi inspired movement from 1918 to 1942 and then concluding that that was the only thing in the Indian independence movement which seems a bit hippocritical to me. I am sure the Encyclopaedia Britannica does not say much more about Bose, but as I said, I am nit here to argue about Bose or his role. I am saying there's a lot lot lot more to Indian independence movement than your version makes out there to be. The encyclopaedia also puts Bose's speeches in inverted commas, which essentially tries to prove these were actually propagandist statements. The encyclopaedia also does not have anything to say (as far as I can see) on the Bombay mutiny, on the role played by the 1915 Ghadar conspiracy on the Amritsar massacre, on the Bombay mutiny, Red Fort trials, etc, but this is what it has to say on the Indian National Army:
Expand to see quotes on the Indian National Army from Britannica Student Encyclopedia: | ||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
I have quoted extensively from the encyclopaedia Britannica artice here, so you can check this. If you tell me you still think that this is not to be included in the article then I will be forced to assume that you're making a Bad Faith edit and will seek a Request for mediation because it will be you making a PoV edit, taking a monolithic view on the Indian independence movement, preventing other editors from making a positive contribution of facts in favour (possibly) of your views and opinions. Rueben lys 00:33, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- First of all, Encyclopaedia Britannica does not have an article on the Indian National Army. It has a short biography of Bose and there is the one paragraph in the India page (in the 19 page history section). The quotes you have compiled above are from the Britannica Student Encyclopaedia which does not have signed articles by historians, but are written by the editorial staff. Please see Misplaced Pages policy on tertiary sources here. Second, your quotes are saying what is well-known: that after the INA failed to "liberate" India, and its leaders were tried for treason by the British, the Congress (somewhat cynically) exploited the wave of sympathy for the INA "generals" to do some PR work for itself. Your quotes don't say, for example, that Nehru attended the trials with Bhulabhai Desai and (along with the Congress) ended up alienating Wavell (the viceroy) even more, which some historians think proved crucial in giving Jinnah the advantage that eventually led to the partition. INA did have a brief flash of glory during the trials, but Bose was long gone by then, and there is no evidence that the British worried about it any more than any mass disturbance in India. It was certainly not on the scale of the Direct Action Day (let alone the Quit India Movement). My basic point remains that there are many more important topics in the Indian Freedom Struggle than either the Indian National Army or Bose himself. Those issues will need to be added before Bose or INA can. If you want to make a contribution, try the History of India, which BTW is silent on Bose! Why should Bose be added here, when he hasn't made it to the History of India page yet? This article is about the Republic of India and has a highly compressed history section. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 02:39, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- Yes there are several aspects in the independence movement (see Indian independence movement). The big question is what to mention in the extremely compressed space in the article India. IMO "militant nationalist movements" or "organisations" need to be mentioned (no individual names though).
- History of India is not really a very up-to-the-mark article. So it need not be compared here. Of course that article needs improvement. That's different issue. Can you, Rueben, propose a compressed way to mention what you are trying to (INA), with good references?--Dwaipayan (talk) 02:56, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- Why should "militant organizations" be mentioned? Balgangadhar Tilak isn't mentioned. Neither are: Lala Lajpat Rai, Jallianwallah Bagh, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, ... Surely Jallianwallah Bagh was of much more sympolic importance in the Indian Independence Movement than the INA trials, which happened after the British had already decided to leave India (after the Cripps mission). There is no evidence in the reliable sources that militant organizations (INA included) made any tangible difference. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:17, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- I do not have any ready reference at hand. So my argument may be ignored. Still, I am putting forward those.
- Militant organizations played notable part at least in the first 30 years of 20th century. Probably the most publicized instance is Bhagat Singh and the associates (and there were several, less publicized events/organizations/personalities). However, these were definitely far less significant than INC. So, I do not propose to mention any particular name or organizations. But that there was a separate (and probably the only separate) kind of movement/notion/ideal/stream other than INC should be mentioned, in as compressed way as possible.
- As F&F has mentioned, independence movement was not monolithic. That is precisely why a mention of the other stream should be there.--Dwaipayan (talk) 03:43, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- Why should "militant organizations" be mentioned? Balgangadhar Tilak isn't mentioned. Neither are: Lala Lajpat Rai, Jallianwallah Bagh, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, ... Surely Jallianwallah Bagh was of much more sympolic importance in the Indian Independence Movement than the INA trials, which happened after the British had already decided to leave India (after the Cripps mission). There is no evidence in the reliable sources that militant organizations (INA included) made any tangible difference. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:17, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- First of all, Encyclopaedia Britannica does not have an article on the Indian National Army. It has a short biography of Bose and there is the one paragraph in the India page (in the 19 page history section). The quotes you have compiled above are from the Britannica Student Encyclopaedia which does not have signed articles by historians, but are written by the editorial staff. Please see Misplaced Pages policy on tertiary sources here. Second, your quotes are saying what is well-known: that after the INA failed to "liberate" India, and its leaders were tried for treason by the British, the Congress (somewhat cynically) exploited the wave of sympathy for the INA "generals" to do some PR work for itself. Your quotes don't say, for example, that Nehru attended the trials with Bhulabhai Desai and (along with the Congress) ended up alienating Wavell (the viceroy) even more, which some historians think proved crucial in giving Jinnah the advantage that eventually led to the partition. INA did have a brief flash of glory during the trials, but Bose was long gone by then, and there is no evidence that the British worried about it any more than any mass disturbance in India. It was certainly not on the scale of the Direct Action Day (let alone the Quit India Movement). My basic point remains that there are many more important topics in the Indian Freedom Struggle than either the Indian National Army or Bose himself. Those issues will need to be added before Bose or INA can. If you want to make a contribution, try the History of India, which BTW is silent on Bose! Why should Bose be added here, when he hasn't made it to the History of India page yet? This article is about the Republic of India and has a highly compressed history section. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 02:39, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- As per WP:UNDUE, the emphasis that we place on different contributing factors leading to India's independence should reflect the weightage reliable sources place on them. If editors think that the current version presents the independence struggle as a monolithic effort led by INC/Mahatma Gandhi, we can certainly consider rephrasing the relevant two sentences. IMO for this summary-style article the militant movements could at best merit an additional phrase/half-sentence, but certainly not a detailed discussion of this length.
- In either case, can we please discuss the specifics here and arrive at a consensus for the language and references that are needed for any additional content, instead of edit-warring on an Featured article ? Thanks. Abecedare 04:41, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
Here are the bare outlines of the 19 pages in Britannica devoted to the Indian Independence struggle (beginning in the 1880s):
Expand to see outline of the 19 pages on Indian Freedom Struggle in Britannica: |
---|
|
Except for two pages, p7 and p13, the pages are long with many long paragraphs. The only militants that are mentioned are in the struggle between the militant (Tilak) wing of the Congress vs. the moderate (Gokhale) wing of the Congress on page 6. "Terrorism" is mentioned in two lines in the context of the partition of Bengal on p7. Bose is mentioned twice, once in a short paragraph introducing the Forward Block on p15 and the second time in the unflattering paragraph quoted above. The Ghadar party gets one paragraph including a mention of Har Dayal. No mention is made of the INA, the INA trials, Bhagat Singh, Chandrasekhar Azad, or any of the other "revolutionaries." In contrast, Pherozeshah Mehta, Dadabhai Naoroji, Surendranath Bannerjee, Gokhale, Jinnah, Tilak, Nehru, Suhrawardy, Liaqat Ali Khan, Patel, and of course Gandhi get a lot of coverage. I said above that the Indian freedom struggle wasn't monolithic, what I meant was that from the 1920s onwards there were fractures in the movement, with the Muslims becoming wary and ultimately splitting off. However, in other ways, it really was a monolithic movement, the Indian National Congress was really the only turbulent mainstream of the movement from its start in 1885 until 1936 and then it was both the Congress and the Muslim League. There was really nothing else that made a tangible difference. People like Bhagat Singh, who killed an official or two here or there, made great romantic heroes, but winning India its independence took mass organization, political skill, and persistence over many decades.
Even if there is consensus to expand the text on the Indian independence movement on this page from two sentences to (say) four or five, I can't see how the militants, revolutionaries, and the INA are going to make the cut. The reliable sources give them short shrift. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 09:57, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- PS Here are some more (searchable on Amazon) sources:
Expand to see five recent standard Histories of India: |
---|
|
Even Bose's own grand-nephew, Sugata Bose, has this to say about the INA trials in his book listed above: "Having shrewdly assessed the public mood, the Congress made the release of the INA prisoners the main issue in their election campaigns." The INA briefly became important because the Congress used it (as I said above) somewhat cynically to do PR work for itself; how does that make INA's contribution intrinsically worthwhile? Fowler&fowler«Talk» 10:35, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
You have quoted the bit about unsigned article, but not that
“ | Unsigned articles may be less reliable, but they may be used so long as the encyclopedia is a high quality one. | ” |
And you're further missing the point that I am not trying (nor anyone else) to rewrite the History to say it was the INA and not the Congress that won India independence, that's a totally different issue altogether. What I am saying is that the independence movement was certainly existent and very strong even before Gandhi arrived and the Congress began its Non coop movement. It was there before that. Also, Ahimsa was not the only method, certainly a widely used one, but not the only one. There were other extremely notable people in addition to Gandhi, of which Nehru certainly qualifies, as does Subhas Bose (who led the turnaround of the Congress into demanding Purna Swaraj in late 1920s, Bose favouring even more millitant approach later). I am also saying that the 1940s saw at least three defining movements, Quit India, Indian National Army, and later inspired by the INA and the Red Fort trials, Bombay mutiny and general public agitations, mass movements, strikes and mayhem in general.
You have deleted the reference to Edwards' The Last Years of British India, Cleveland, World Pub. Co.,1964, p. 93 which said
The Government of India had hoped, by prosecuting members of the INA, to reinforce the morale of the Indian army. It succeeded only in creating unease, in making the soldiers feel slightly ashamed that they themselves had supported the British. If Bose and his men had been on the right side — and all India now confirmed that they were — then Indians in the Indian army must have been on the wrong side. It slowly dawned upon the Government of India that the backbone of the British rule, the Indian army, might now no longer be trustworthy. The ghost of Subhas Bose, like Hamlet’s father, walked the battlements of the Red Fort (where the INA soldiers were being tried), and his suddenly amplified figure overawed the conference that was to lead to independence
You're insisting that the Britannica student Encyclopaedia reference is not admissible.So as other references,James L. Raj; Making and unmaking of British India. Abacus. 1997. p571, p598
Indian service personnel were at this time being swept by a wave of nationalist sentiments, as would be proved by the mutinies that occurred in the Royal Indian Air Force. In the after-effect of the mutiny, a Weekly intelligence summary issued on 25 March 1946 admitted that the Indian army, navy and air force units were no longer trust worthy, and, for the army, "only day to day estimates of steadiness could be made". . It came to the situation where, if wide-scale public unrest took shape, the armed forces could not be relied upon to support counter-insurgency operations as they had been during the "Quit India" movement of 1942.
Peter Fay's The Forgotten Army: India's Armed Struggle for Independence, 1942-1945. p 519 says
Auchinleck did not say, and probably did not believe, that the Raj had ceased to be the object of the Indian officer's loyalty simply because Bose and his renegades had come along. Colonel Wren had not supposed so either. Both believed that the shifting of alleigance was bound to happen, and would have happened sooner or later no matter what. Nevertheless it did not happen later. It happened then. In the autumn if 1945 India was swept by a storm of excitement and indignation, a storm that Bose and his renegades ignited. It was a storm the Indian officer, and the Jawan too, could not ignore. They did not ignore it. We have it on the authority of the Commander-in-Chief that they did not ignore it. In 1942, at the time of quit India, there had been no question of reliability. Now their own commander doubted it. Three years of campaigning, three years climaxed by victories in Europe and on the Irrawaddy, do not explain the change. Only that autumn storm can. It was the Indian National Army that forced the British hand.
As for your persistent references to the "unflattering" paragraphs on Bose. I am sure that is how it is written by the author you mention. I am not quoting anything here from Fay, James, Majumder,Lebra,Hauner, Fujiwara, Kurowski, and possibly a number of other historians of authority who will not just tell you totally a different story (of realpolitik and patriotism), they will also tell you that you're still swallowing World War II war-time Allied propaganda superimposed on refusing to see anything but evil on anybody who worked with axis powers. I am not quoting because my purpose is not to glorify Bose or his army, but to make an encyclopaedic entry of facts, which should make it clear that the Indian independence movement was not a gift from Gandhi and Congress to Indian people. Stuff happened, very notable stuff, that were intricately linked to the Raj's decision to leave (of which INA is just one of at least three), and these were of a scale large enough and popular enough and potent enough to find mention in an encyclopaedia article on India. Rueben lys 11:33, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
Controversial claim
I have added the controversial claim tag chiefly for reasons talked in detail above. Fowler&fowler«Talk»'s interpretation of what is notable and deserves inclusion in the history section in the India article is skewing the facts to give the idea that the Indian independence movement started in the first half of the twentieth century, and consisted chiefly if not solely of the Indian National Congress and Gandhi. I edited this bit to reflect three very notable events that all my resources tell me are of stupendous importance. But Fowler's sources, which I believe is the Encyclopaedia Britannica and some other books on Concise histories of India, seems to be very concise, hence I believe reproduction from these would (and has) further compress this section to give an essentially misrepresentaed point of view. I also believe (without prejudice) Fowler has at least some PoV issue with Subhas Bose, which I must clarify is not the point of my earlier edits, although it does deserve to be mention in my opinion. As Dwaipayan suggested above, this section could be re-written, I am willing to do this not to a compromised version, but to a collaborated version. But till this is done, I believe the version as exists when I instituting this tag is an incomplete version that gives a factually totally wrong impression to the layman who would reading this article. And this is not acceptable. Rueben lys 12:00, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- Amazing! How do you get that I think the Indian Independence struggle began in the 20th century. I just listed all 19 pages from the Britannica chapter on Indian independence movement written by Stanley Wolpert. The pages begin with the founding of the Indian National Congress in 1885, and address many issues that had already come to a head in the late 19th century ... BTW, I have not made a single edit in the history section myself. But I am aware that it is written in a concise style. Go back and take a good look at my Britannica outline. If you had to compress 19 pages into two (or even four) sentences, how do you think Bose will merit a mention? Simply, not in the cards. BTW, the five books I have provided links for are not just "concise" histories of India, but standard histories of India that are used as text-books all over the world. Obviously a 500 page "concise" history written by an internationally known academic historian(Stanley Wolpert or Sugata Bose) is a much better gauge of notability than a specialty book about the Indian national army, which obviously will have details about the INA. I think the two sentences could certainly be made more balanced, along the lines of: "The nationalist freedom movement in India began in 1885 with the founding of the Indian National Congress. Although other political leaders played a role in the freedom struggle, the major direction was provided by Mahatma Gandhi whose movement of mass civil disobedience based on non-violence proved decisive." Even if it is increased to four sentences, it would make room for Swadeshi movement, Tilak, Gokhale, Muslim League, Jinnah, and the Non-cooperation movement. Still don't see how Bose, INA, or the revolutionaries will make the cut. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 15:42, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- Here is a list containing the subject of each paragraph in the section on the Indian Freedom Movement in Encyclopedia Encarta written by historian Philip Oldenburg, of Columbia University:
- Movement for Independence
- Rise of Indian Nationalism: (paragraphs) 1. Aftermath of 1857, 2. Formation of Indian National Congress, Dadabhai Naoroji, 3. Reformers: Bal Gangadhar Tilak, 4. Curzon, partition of Bengal, swadeshi movement, 5. Split in the congress between extremists (Tilak) and moderates (Gokhale), 6. Muslim League, 7. Reunification of Bengal, World War I
- The World Wars and the Emergence of Gandhi: (paragraphs) 8. Indians in WW I (One sentence on Ghadar party: "A small, mostly Sikh revolutionary movement appeared briefly in Punjab." 9. Return of Gandhi from SA, pact with Jinnah, 10. Montagu-Chemlford Reforms, 11. Resistance to Rowlatt Acts, birth of Satyagraha, Jallianwalla Bagh Massacre, 12. Gandhi's non-cooperation movement, Congress's demand for complete independence, 13. Gandhi's Salt Satyagraha, 14. Govt. of India Act, formation of governments in states by Congress in 1937, 15. WWII, Pakistan resolution (1940), Quit India resolution (1942), Direct action day (1946), formation of interim government by Jawaharlal Nehru, 16. Partition of India, transfer of power, Hindu-Muslim riots, Gandhi as "one man boundary force." There is no mention of Bose, INA, Bhagat Singh, or any other militant. The only reference to extremism is indirectly to the Ghadar party in the one sentence quoted above . Doesn't that seem obvious now. Sixteen paragraphs and the only mention of anything other than the Congress is either to the Muslim League or the one sentence to the Ghadar party! Fowler&fowler«Talk» 19:10, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
- Here is a list containing the subject of each paragraph in the section on the Indian Freedom Movement in Encyclopedia Encarta written by historian Philip Oldenburg, of Columbia University:
- We're back to the same issue again other encyclopaedias are not recording these (I haven't read this source I cannot verify these claims). I have given you references from three different sources that opposes the view given by your references. The very basis of this argument is that the article currently is giving a one sided view that is turning into a controversial claim of a monilithic view. You're source confirms the Quit India point, so you accept that is notable. I have given references from other sources that say that the INA and its products, the Bombay mutiny and public agitations at the INA trials was of stupendous importance and is definitely notable. I suspect that the encyclopaedias are based on official histories. I am using sources that are based either on orginal, or secondary research and are just as notable as the authors or references that you're providing, so I am certain that theres a midline that we should be able to reach where we both can collaborate. The two lines you mention can be easily expanded to a concise paragraph to include these. And when you say it doesn't make the cut, it doesn't make your cut. I am sorry but I will reinstitue the tag till this is addressed, especially in relation to the talk below to expand this article. And I also have a problem that you're dictating the terms here. I wish to reach a consensus, but this article can be and should be improved. And with regards to quoting from other encyclopaedia, I am sure we can improve the quality of the wikipedia article, it doesn't have to be a photocopy of other encyclopaedias. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rueben lys (talk • contribs) 13:32, August 24, 2007 (UTC)
- In order to determine the overall notability of an event, other encyc articles are a useful criterion. I have to agree that Bose/INA are not notable enough to be mentioned in a summary of the freedom movement. Hornplease 14:54, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- We're back to the same issue again other encyclopaedias are not recording these (I haven't read this source I cannot verify these claims). I have given you references from three different sources that opposes the view given by your references. The very basis of this argument is that the article currently is giving a one sided view that is turning into a controversial claim of a monilithic view. You're source confirms the Quit India point, so you accept that is notable. I have given references from other sources that say that the INA and its products, the Bombay mutiny and public agitations at the INA trials was of stupendous importance and is definitely notable. I suspect that the encyclopaedias are based on official histories. I am using sources that are based either on orginal, or secondary research and are just as notable as the authors or references that you're providing, so I am certain that theres a midline that we should be able to reach where we both can collaborate. The two lines you mention can be easily expanded to a concise paragraph to include these. And when you say it doesn't make the cut, it doesn't make your cut. I am sorry but I will reinstitue the tag till this is addressed, especially in relation to the talk below to expand this article. And I also have a problem that you're dictating the terms here. I wish to reach a consensus, but this article can be and should be improved. And with regards to quoting from other encyclopaedia, I am sure we can improve the quality of the wikipedia article, it doesn't have to be a photocopy of other encyclopaedias. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rueben lys (talk • contribs) 13:32, August 24, 2007 (UTC)
“ | There was also a split within Congress between those who believed that violence was a justifiable weapon in the fight against imperial oppression (whose most iconic figure was Subhas Chandra Bose, who went on to form the Indian National Army), and those who stressed non-violence. | ” |
Note that Tilak etc are not mentioned in this article, but Bose and the INA are. Other Books and sources which you're refusing to accept as references and sources are mentioning the alternative view point. Besides, Bose was not my original point at all, my original point (and I am tired of saying this) were the three movements in the last five years of which surprisingly only one linked to the Congress is "finding" support while the other two are being "found" to be non-notable even if this is referenced and found to be notable by a number of authors. As such I would like it if we had a larger discussion on this before a conclusion is reached. There's plenty of space to expand this section beyond a few sentences so space seems to be a weasel argument and moreover is reaching PoV pushing to only Gandhian movement. This needs to addressed.Rueben lys 16:27, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
Hold on a second, the Britannica articel says this about Bose
“ | Many of the younger members of the Congress were eager to take up arms against the British, and some considered Gandhi an agent of imperial rule for having called a halt to the first satyagraha in 1922. Most famous and popular of these militant Congress leaders was Subhas Chandra Bose (1897–1945) of Bengal, a disciple of C.R. Das and an admirer of Hitler and Mussolini. Bose was so popular within Congress that he was elected its president twice (in 1938 and 1939) over Gandhi's opposition and the active opposition of most members of its central working committee. | ” |
Shows much about nonnotabillity.
Article should be expanded
Since there was a bit of an argument over the content of the article, I went and checked the main text by moving it into word and doing a count. The main text is only 25k. That's not really much at all. Surely the article can just be proportionally expanded so that many things can be explained better; eg the stuff described above. If there is twice as much stuff, there will also be twice as much space to add the pictures everyone keeps on arguing about. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 01:29, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Since you have suggested that the article be expanded to twice its size, I thought I'd mention that in November 2006 Nichalp made this post on these pages in answer to a query of mine:
The India page was modeled on the Australia page, and the latter, in Fall 2006, when I last read it, was the best-written country Featured Article. Australia currently stands at 55KB (text + infoboxes etc.), which is more or less the same as India. Since the Australia page is currently locked down, I imagine that they too have arguments about what additions are appropriate. Are you suggesting to them too that they expand? BTW, the size of just the text according to Misplaced Pages is 28,172 bytes, just 2KB short of Nichalp's 30KB number. (Please see sub-page User:Fowler&fowler/India_word_count.) Fowler&fowler«Talk» 12:52, 24 August 2007 (UTC)The longer the article, the harder it is to read. Around 30 kb in raw page count is about the maximum that a casual reader can read in one sitting. Any longer, it becomes more tedious to read. I'm not saying that 35 kb be kept as an arbitary number. Having a lower count allows us to be more flexible when welcoming newer additions. If the size was set at 45 kb, it would very well have ballooned to 60 kb by now. Granted, most of the country articles are more than 35, but you've also accounted for infoboxes, references and other meta data. I also have worked on Bhutan and Nepal to FA status and at the time of it being promoted, both were 30 odd kb. It hasn't been maintained since then. As for other countries, I have commented about the same for SA and China in the past, even dragging China to FARC. Please note that at the time of promotion, a lot of these FAs were much lower in page size. Regards, =Nichalp «Talk»= 02:08, 19 November 2006 (UTC)
- In reviewing Blnguyen's initial post (above) and his other posts (below), I am appalled at the manner in which he has approached this topic, which while well-meaning, borders on the irresponsible. As a sys-op, he must know that a page like India is often a battle-ground for controversial edits. The least he could have done, especially as some one with scant history of editing the India page (see here and type: India), was to have set up the context of his post and then make some careful suggestions. Instead, he threw out a half-formed idea with the sentence, "If there is twice as much stuff, there will also be twice as much space to add the pictures everyone keeps on arguing about." Did it occur to him that the conflict about pictures is not just about space? Similarly, after I suggested that the most academic historians do not consider Bose's role in the Indian freedom struggle to be notable, he added another rationale: "Well I don't have the expertise to judge any specific proposed additions on the grounds of historical notability, I just note that if the article is expanded then the real estate increases so there would be less unproductive debate over content over an article which is not all that controversial." I am afraid, if anything, the contrary is true, when it comes to this page. I see only more battles being fought over what is notable, with various editors with their various windows on history, each wanting to get in their
tuppenceha'penny-worth. Finally, he also added below, in response to my post, the following gratuitous remark, "I was just generally observing the air of confidence about the concerns raised in the past about article deficiencies." Where exactly did he observe this air of confidence? And was it in response to a genuinely productive suggestion? I'm afraid, he has displayed a fragmented, unplanned, and ultimately unhelpful approach, well-meaning though his motivation might have been. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 16:35, 24 August 2007 (UTC) This is not an "off-topic rant," but very much related to user:Blnguyen's edits on this page. It is important for other users to read (my comments and user:Blnguyen's). Fowler&fowler«Talk» 08:55, 25 August 2007 (UTC)- (In response to Blnguyen:) This is exactly what I'd suggested several months ago. But the same filibusters who were active then seem to be taking toll of the article even now. Bogus concerns about 'article bloat' have been bandied from time to time and several well meaning editors have been driven away and their edits have been stonewalled no end. The simplest of edits are resisted on specious and bogus grounds and the article quality suffers. But hey! its a FA! its one of the best on wikipedia! yeah right. Sarvagnya 01:50, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Just a general comment that the FA standards have changed over time and articles that were FAed in 2005 and earlier would now fail FA. (The comprehensive and NPOV needs are about the same, but the references and prose required is much higher) and would be lucky to pass GA in terms of references and prose (that's for a baseline article). So to say that an old-days FA can't be improved is not true. Xiangqi (Chinese chess) was FA in 2005 and has been demoted. Chennai was made FA in 2005 and has lots of unsourced stuff and so forth and really should not be an FA. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 02:33, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- (In response to Blnguyen:) This is exactly what I'd suggested several months ago. But the same filibusters who were active then seem to be taking toll of the article even now. Bogus concerns about 'article bloat' have been bandied from time to time and several well meaning editors have been driven away and their edits have been stonewalled no end. The simplest of edits are resisted on specious and bogus grounds and the article quality suffers. But hey! its a FA! its one of the best on wikipedia! yeah right. Sarvagnya 01:50, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- In reviewing Blnguyen's initial post (above) and his other posts (below), I am appalled at the manner in which he has approached this topic, which while well-meaning, borders on the irresponsible. As a sys-op, he must know that a page like India is often a battle-ground for controversial edits. The least he could have done, especially as some one with scant history of editing the India page (see here and type: India), was to have set up the context of his post and then make some careful suggestions. Instead, he threw out a half-formed idea with the sentence, "If there is twice as much stuff, there will also be twice as much space to add the pictures everyone keeps on arguing about." Did it occur to him that the conflict about pictures is not just about space? Similarly, after I suggested that the most academic historians do not consider Bose's role in the Indian freedom struggle to be notable, he added another rationale: "Well I don't have the expertise to judge any specific proposed additions on the grounds of historical notability, I just note that if the article is expanded then the real estate increases so there would be less unproductive debate over content over an article which is not all that controversial." I am afraid, if anything, the contrary is true, when it comes to this page. I see only more battles being fought over what is notable, with various editors with their various windows on history, each wanting to get in their
- Nichalp (who took this to an FA) is pretty clear on a few things: new space should be used for new topics, (like we did with Flora and Fauna, Military, etc) not to expand on old topics like history. And that photographs, as far as is possible, should be featured pictures. The argument about Bose is not just about space. Even in twice the space (say ten sentences for the Freedom Movement) Bose won't gain mention. Encarta has 16 long paragraphs, with no mention of Bose. Britannica has 19 pages and he get one unflattering paragraph. Among academic historians, there is consensus that the Indian Freedom Movement had two mainstreams: the Indian National Congress (primary) and the Muslim League (secondary). Fowler&fowler«Talk» 01:43, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Well I don't have the expertise to judge any specific proposed additions on the grounds of historical notability, I just note that if the article is expanded then the real estate increases so there would be less unproductive debate over content over an article which is not all that controversial. If it was a full on history article about ethnic or religious wars and so forth or a politician, then one would expect lots of arguments, but since most of this article is not even about history or religion or ethnology, there should not be the same big arguments over and over again. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 02:33, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- user:Fowler&fowler(did i get the spelling right, prof?) is requested to stop embarrassing Nichalp and read up on WP:OWN. Nobody, not even if they FAed an article owns the article. Sarvagnya 01:55, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Also a note that Nichalp has been more or less away/busy, and his latest 100 article edits date back three months. It would be inadvisable to simply say that he will "take care of it" whether out of deference to his accomplishments or on the other hand laziness or whatever. In the past two months four of his FAs have been FARed and three were delisted, and the other - Railways in India was a default no result almost, pending extra work anticipated (which did not materialise). Even the articles of the most famous, like Lord Emsworth (talk · contribs) with his record 58 are now routinely demoted since they are out of date with current standards and he has now retired. So the fact that Nichalp was responsible for the article will not make it immune. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 02:55, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Finally, the article could easily fail FAR right now because of the lack of citations. Although people say "that's obvious" the current FA way is to have all info in a given para to be directly attainable from all footnotes within that para. In summary form, this isn't necessary if the daughter article is inline cited, but in this case the article fails
- history - is only partially referenced and the daughter articles are partially and totally unreferenced respectively
- Government - only partly referenced. Daughter article has none
- Politics - totally unsourced. Daughter totally unsourced
- Foreign relations and military - partly sourced in root and daughter
- Subdivisions - totally unsourced: daughter article Subdivisions of India totally unsourced. See also Political integration is an FA which would be demoted if it was nomninated.
- Geography - partially sourced: Daughter Geography of India was delisted FA because of this (among other reasons)
- Culture - minority is sourced:Daughter articles are not sourced.
- Finally, the article could easily fail FAR right now because of the lack of citations. Although people say "that's obvious" the current FA way is to have all info in a given para to be directly attainable from all footnotes within that para. In summary form, this isn't necessary if the daughter article is inline cited, but in this case the article fails
- Also a note that Nichalp has been more or less away/busy, and his latest 100 article edits date back three months. It would be inadvisable to simply say that he will "take care of it" whether out of deference to his accomplishments or on the other hand laziness or whatever. In the past two months four of his FAs have been FARed and three were delisted, and the other - Railways in India was a default no result almost, pending extra work anticipated (which did not materialise). Even the articles of the most famous, like Lord Emsworth (talk · contribs) with his record 58 are now routinely demoted since they are out of date with current standards and he has now retired. So the fact that Nichalp was responsible for the article will not make it immune. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 02:55, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- There are also references which are not referenced uniformly. I don't know about the prose but there are many short paragraphs. One of the sources is India's UN statement, so it cannot be taken as spin-free. Some of the references are not ideal given the prominence of the topic; tabloids and sources not particularly of the highest quality like 18 and 19 - 18 appears to be a home-made website. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 02:55, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- There are also references which are not referenced uniformly. I don't know about the prose but there are many short paragraphs. One of the sources is India's UN statement, so it cannot be taken as spin-free. Some of the references are not ideal given the prominence of the topic; tabloids and sources not particularly of the highest quality like 18 and 19 - 18 appears to be a home-made website. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 02:55, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
I never said or implied that Nichalp will take care of the article, that in his absence, we passively stand around, or that the India page rest on its laurels. Obviously, we are aware that Nichalp is occupied and the upkeep of the article is being managed adequately. Whether or not the article needs an expansion, and if it does, about what, should be decide by an RfC. The last RfC we had (in February 2007) about adding new material to this article is summarized here. It was certainly felt then (by the majority) that adding material willy-nilly (without concurrent discussion) is unwise. In my opinion, the article doesn't need an unstructured expansion. The expansion should be about things that have been decided by common consensus to be important, not about accommodating drive-by edits by the POV-pushers of the moment (which the Bose problem seems to be). I can see expanding the article to include sections on public health, poverty in India, the IT sector in India, urban-rural divide in India, wealth in India, natural disasters in India, ... I'm happy to do an RfC for it, if there is appetite. I have personally edited only the lead and the flora and fauna section, and you will agree that the latter is adequately referenced. I am happy to copy-edit the article for prose along with some other people (like Abecedare, Universe=atom, Gnanapiti, Saravask, Sarvagnya, and Knowledge-Hegemony, ...). Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:15, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Sorry, I didn't mean you specifically, I was just generally observing the air of confidence about the concerns raised in the past about article deficiencies and was just pointing out that Nichalp isn't here to do the work if the article does get put in FAR and that those that have had a low survival rate. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 03:21, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Just saw your post about citations. Well, maybe instead of worrying about expanding the article, the first priority should be to properly cite the different claims. Since I have access to academic databases, I am happy to help with that, if there are others willing to work on that as well. Why don't we focus on that instead of expansion? Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:20, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- I re-read your post and cursorily read some sections on the India page. I agree it definitely needs to be copy-edited for better prose. As I mentioned above, I am happy to work on the prose if others can help out as well. (Nichalp had in fact asked me to edit India related FACs for prose here. Unfortunately, I didn't have that kind of time, but I could certainly do it for the India page itself.) Also, I am happy to work on the citations. Are there other volunteers? Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:40, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- I think the citation and prose issues that Blnguyen raises are very valid concerns. The good news about the unreferenced bits though is that, as far as I see, there is nothing in the article that is unsourcable (and maybe that is what has made us lazy), but it does need to be referenced. Also given the vast literature available on the subject, it would be nice to not only look to add pro forma citations based on the first google hit/news article we find (such as sources 15/18/19/20/63 etc), but also to pay attention to the quality of the sources. At the same time we can take care of the reference formatting issues, perhaps by using the citation templates for consistency. I'll try to help in this effort though my time on wikipedia may be somewhat limited in the upcoming weeks.
- Finally, I suggest that we separate the more contentious expansion, and content revision issues from these more straighforward "style" concerns, since the former will require careful discussion on a section-by-section basis. Cheers. Abecedare 04:23, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- I re-read your post and cursorily read some sections on the India page. I agree it definitely needs to be copy-edited for better prose. As I mentioned above, I am happy to work on the prose if others can help out as well. (Nichalp had in fact asked me to edit India related FACs for prose here. Unfortunately, I didn't have that kind of time, but I could certainly do it for the India page itself.) Also, I am happy to work on the citations. Are there other volunteers? Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:40, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Just saw your post about citations. Well, maybe instead of worrying about expanding the article, the first priority should be to properly cite the different claims. Since I have access to academic databases, I am happy to help with that, if there are others willing to work on that as well. Why don't we focus on that instead of expansion? Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:20, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
It sounds like this article may be due for review. However, I don't feel it is my place to pull the trigger on that. Rather I will just throw the idea out there for you all. Rangek 03:59, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Here a personal review on India article.
- Compared to articles like Japan, Canada or Germany this article is too short in its coverage of a diverse country like India.
- It can be further expanded (with only 25 KB of prose). Even the article on ex- US President Gerald Ford(FA) has closely 2.5 times the prose size!!
- Section: Subdivisions is just a list of states. Which is totally opposed to FA- standard aticles. MOS says listiness should be avoided.
- Section: Culture is a confusing piece of Music of India, Cinema of India, Indian literature, Indian cuisine, Sports in India, Public holidays in India, Indian architecture.
- No separate Sports,(or) Transport and (or) Media section.
- Section: Politics totally unreferenced.
Also Geography and Culture are not supported by references.
Since I see a toning down of the "hey.. its an FA.. leave it alone" pitch, I propose that,
- We FAR and de-FA this post-haste. The "its an FA" nonsense has been used consistently by paranoid watchdogs of the article over the last several months to frustrate not just content additions but also style improvements. Several well meaning editors (many of them ips) have been driven away. No constructive work on this article can take place as long as we have the "its an FA!" weighing us down.
- Once we de-FA it, let the article be thrown open to additions of content(even unsourced), style and even POV for a atleast a month. Let people add whatever they want. Let them create whatever section they see fit. Let the article bloat to whatever size.. even 100 kb. We'll gaurd the article against nothing but simple vandalism. If people want, we'll live with a {{underconstruction}} tag through the period (though imo it'd be counter productive).
- A month later, we'll have a confused mass of prose which we can then first start hiving off into the appropriate 'child articles'. If child articles dont exist we'll create them. And then, we'll start hacking down this article.
- This is pretty much what we did (or happened) on the Karnataka article. It was in pretty bad shape.. about 35-40kb with citations. Dinesh would keep padding the History section from time to time and eventually the History section was occupying nearly a fourth of the article space(maybe more). Others, though not as prolific as Dinesh, kept adding content to the different sections. Then user:Amarrg came along and started adding content left, right and center. Nobody stopped him. Nobody stopped anybody, for that matter. And in less than a month and a half the article went from 35-40kb to 90+ kb. That is when we shut down and started working on prose, style etc.,.. And after a month of frenzied copyediting, the article was FA! (Admittedly though, it still has some prose and style issues which will be fixed in due course).
This seems to me to be the quickest and surest way to improve the article. Remember that the primary goal of an encyclopedia is to provide information. Everything else comes next. Sarvagnya 05:29, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
Addendum - Do a comparison of the statistics for Karnataka and India using the tool here. Scroll down all the way down to see the pattern of edits. Note the total number of edits on both articles. Karnataka has taken 2246 edits to India's whopping 13161 edits. Both articles were created within days of each other. Yes India might attract 10 times more vandalism as compared to Karnataka, but then the same is true also of the 'number of unique editors'. With all due respects to the likes of Nichalp, any which way we dissect and analyse the data, we see that several months have been wasted on the India article just resting on our laurels. Statistics can be interpreted in various ways, but I still dont think there is any justification for the fact that 9000+ 'major' edits later, the India article should be in the shape and size it is now. Sarvagnya 05:52, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Interesting idea Sarvagnya! Wouldn't it be more prudent and fruitful to implement it on a user subpage, rather than the main article, which is in pretty good (though not unimprovable) condition to start with and is among the most viewed pages on wikipedia ? Abecedare 06:11, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- imo, doing it on the user subpage is not going to work because a user subpage can never attract the kind of attention that the article does. And in any case, like my edit summary said, I was 'thinking aloud' (above). If what I described above is too radical(it is not, imo), we could perhaps explore toning it down a bit. We'll perhaps go one section at a time. For example, it was pointed out that there is no section on sports. If we decide to have it, let us throw it open to editors to do what they want with it... in less than two weeks (or even a week, I'm sure) we'll have a pretty decent section on Sports. What say? Sarvagnya 06:25, 24 August 2007 (UTC)`
Yes, this article must be expanded. Actually I was the person who posted about this matter some days back and I was told about of some nonsense WP:SS rules. If some one is interested one can see my comments above in Talk:India#Critical Attention all concerned associated with WP:IND.Amartyabag 12:02, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- Expanding the text should not mean that we either abandon summary style or throw everything open. In particular, there are sections that are not included: Science and Technology, Law, and Sports are, for example, in the Germany FA and not in this one.
- I think that the current sections can be expanded by at most a paragraph each, but that should be our last priority after writing new ones. Hornplease 12:23, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- I think this article manages admirably at its current length. At the same time, I wouldn't object if it were expanded by 20% (especially the History section). The referencing could do with an audit, and it's a concern that the daughter articles are not up to scratch, if what is expressed here is correct. I'm disappointed to see the military given such prominence towards the top. Tony 14:06, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
- I think the argument for space is being used to put forward a PoV issue on the History section that deals with the Indian independence movement to essentially say the Congress and Gandhian movement were the only movement. To a layman who doesn't know anything about India and reads this article, this is the very idea that would be derived. My argument has been twisted and turned to various degreed earlier and the authors have used some other encyclopaedis articles that favour their view to put forward that this is the only interpretation. I have produced other references and sources, including that of notable historians and also of notable books which are not enecyclopaedias and primary reference sources but these seems to have been unacceptable sources to my fellow editors. There's also a certain extent of PoV pushing here and I have come across statements like the Indian National Army is a non-notable event in the independence movement, as is Bombay mutiny, Subhas Bose is also non-notable, as is Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Bhagat Singh etc etc... I feel the author is pushing his PoV here and is probably not in touch with the Indian view here. I would like it if we had a larger discussion to expand the bit on the Independence movement to at least a paragraph which does justice to the movement and not just a monolithic Gandhi-and-Congress-only opinion, because these are opinion forming words and views. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rueben lys (talk • contribs) 16:39, August 24, 2007 (UTC)
Article expansion - 2
I have to say, as I have said before, this article summerizes too much... I've looked at other country articles that have been featured and they have a lot more topics than this page...i think it's time to add a science and tech section or another similar section... here are some things i noticed about other featured country articles:
- Australia - long history section,
- Cambodia- transport section
- Canada- long history section, long geography and government sections, long culture section
- Chad - all sections are thorough and long
- Japan- long history section, science & tech section, education & health section, sports section
- Libya- long politics section & history section, huge demographics section,
- Pakistan- science section, tourism section, holidays section, huge history section
- turkey- all long sections
- South Africa - history and flora sections are long, agriculture section, religion section, media section, tourism section
while I'm not at all saying that we should add all of these sections, I do feel that a majority of other FA'ed country articles are longer and more thorough than the india one. They are also much more appealing to the eye. i think we should expand sections a little and definitely add more sections to the article. Nikkul 12:57, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
I also noticed that none of the other featured country articles had a language tag on top of the article even though most of them speak a different language Nikkul 13:00, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
I'd like to point out that there isn't a strong consensus about how long great articles should be. There has been a very longstanding opinion among a large number of users that articles are better when held to 30kb or less of prose and there is a lot of merit in that position. Shorter articles are easier to read and there's always summary style supporting articles to fill in the expansive details. There is another opinion that is a bit newer, but also I've noticed widely held, that articles are better when they are longer in order to be fully comprehensive. But since there isn't a strong consensus on the issue I'm not sure I see the merit in constantly bringing the issue up for individual articles. I do note that I personally prefer the shorter main article because when well written, it provides a best of both worlds situation. A good summarized overview and still provides the detail as needed. It's an advantage that the more expansive main article cannot offer. - Taxman 03:52, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- I really do not see any merit in the "keep it small... 25-30 kb is ideal to read and digest in one sitting.." line of argument. I think it is a specious argument, in that nobody ever said that encyclopedia articles were meant to be read in one sitting. Also it is very subjective. The only thing that everyone agrees about an encyclopedia is that it is and should be a source of information. The more the better (now dont jump at me. I'm not suggesting that the article should look like this either). But some wordsmiths here(and in the past) seem to be giving people the impression that all those who're in favour of expanding the article are also suggesting a departure from WP:SS. That is absolutely and emphatically not the case. WP:SS doesnt mean that the article should read like a little more than a blurb. Especially with country articles there is tremendous scope to treat the subject at depth and we need to do it while at the same time not losing sight of WP:SS.
- This article probably has got to be one of the few ones on wikipedia where fights are waged even when there are hardly any "content issues"!! A disgusting amount of time and effort has been expended on the talk page simply because people are allergic to adding any information! Any addition of information is simply reverted instead of taking the opportunity to improve upon it and weave it seamlessly into the prose. Concerns have been raised in the past about under representation of several things, people, regions, places etc., in the article. All concerns have been simply swept aside with bogus arguments like 'article size', 'its an FA=it is perfect=dont touch it', WP:UNDUE, WP:SS etc.,. It is high time it stopped and we decide that the article needs to be expanded... and expanded substantially. A country article like I said deserves to be treated at some depth and we need to do it. A quick check using this tool for both the article and the talk page is revealing. A whopping 13000(easily one of the highest on wikipedia for a 'non-controversial' article) edits for a measly 25kb of prose is just obscene, way more obscene than the 'phallic obscenity' that somebody pointed out. Sarvagnya 05:54, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- User:Sarvagnya: India is also the third most popular country page (after the US and the UK). See statistic in the section below. The most popular country pages all have a largish number of edits: the US has 21K edits, UK 11.8K edits, Japan 12.5K edits, Canada 12.5K edits. (PS. Didn't realize your search tool was the same as mine in the section below. I wasted 10 minutes rummaging on Nichalp's talk page, to find it.)Fowler&fowler«Talk» 11:46, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- You can disagree which option is better Sarvagnya, but the fact is the shorter main article offers an advantage the expansive one cannot. And the shorter article still allows access to all the details, something you seem to be ignoring. Thus the best of both worlds. - Taxman 02:51, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
I completely agree with Sarvagnya...We spend more time arguing on the talk page than we spend actually improving the article...Nowadays, most people dont even bother to fix something they feel is wrong with the article because they know its going to get reverted. This is a country page, and it needs to be expanded. If you look at all the other pages above, they are all much bigger and more thorough than this page...its time we xpand Nikkul 12:21, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
Request for Comment
Template:RFCpol Template:RFChist
Statement by Rueben lys (talk · contribs):
I have tried to edit the history section to say that the political movement started in the last decades of the 19th century, that Congress came to be the strongest one of many pollitical organisations, there was non-violent and violent philosophies with considerable following of both, that Gandhi forefronted the movement from 1920s, and that there were three notable events in the last five years of the movement that are held of quite considerable importance with relation to the movement. I have referenced my edits to respectable sources including the Encyclopaedia Britannica, BBC's history section, and a number of published accounts of the Raj and the independence movement. These edits have been repeatedly reverted by user Fowler&Fowler who insists that the bit on independence movement can not and should not be expanded anymore, as well as that what my edits are trying to cede more than deserved importance to non-notable events. Hie has also insisted that nothing outside the Gandhian movement is notable and insists on a version that says that
- The movement started in the first decades of the twentieth century (It didn't and is thus factually wrong, only the first non-cooperation movement started around that time).
- That the Congress started the movement (It did not, the pollitical movement for independence had already started long before the Congress, the party was founded in 1885 and rapidly came to the forefront of the political campaign).
- Millions of people engaged in civil disobedience with a commitment to Gandhi's philosophy of Ahimsa. (This in particular seems to be a PoV statement, since more radical movements with considerable public support already existed before Gandhi arrived in India, Gandhi's philosophy was one of many strong views, as well as that Congress itself became divided in the late 1920s on wether to keep following Gandhi's strategy or to take more radical means. Also Quit India Movement was undertaken with a commitment far from Ahimsa).
Fowler also insists that no mention at all of the Indian National Army, Red Fort trials and the Bombay mutiny as well as the tense pollitcal and public situation after the war is admissible to the article because
- His sources and other encyclopaedias he quotes (which do mention other movements in a considerably larger section on the Indian independence movement) are said to ascribe these as nonnotable and he insists that in the article the the independence section be compressed, and for the sake of comressing, nothing else is seen as "making the cut". The references I have provided are not given considered at all, which seems to me to pass into more of an article ownership issue.
- Fowler mentioned earlier that the India article is modelled on the Australia artice, which has a considerably detailed history section and includes quite details the History of modern Australia, especially of notable events from early 1900s through to 1950s I can't see why Fowler refuses to accept that this can be done for this article as well. And also, why is Fowler deciding???
- I have a feeling Fowler has a PoV issue with certain very notable Indian nationalists, particularly Subhas Bose, which I say because of the general tone of his comments here.
I have tried to address my concerns to Fowler, but I have not seen any efforts to collaborate, and have had not reasons or seen efforts to believe that a constructive process is possible. Also his comments on unoing my revision was
“ | Reuben Iys, you can't impose you idiosyncratic version of history and include sizeable text and more sizeable footnotes without discussion on the talk page | ” |
which seems to me to be an obstruction to constructive editing bourne out of an ownership issue.
At least two other editors have expressed the view that the my edits do hold ground and that the section could be improved and also that the edits should be discussed instead of edit-warring. One other editor has expressed the view that Fowler's views are justified based on entries from other encyclopaedias, which I feel needs to be addressed since other sources which I have referenced hold a different view
I would like these concerns to be addressed since my efforts to make the history section more comprehensive is being frustrated here. I have no intention of edit warring and would like to see a collaboration to improve on the article.Rueben lys 23:38, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
My earleri concerns are compounded by this discussion in Fowler's talk page which might suggest there is issue about ownership and collaboration problems.Rueben lys 23:53, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
Rueben's sources
Opinions found in different Journals about Fowler's sources
Expand to see reviews of the Books quoted later by Fowler, found in different journals, as specified, obtained from JSTOR. |
---|
|
Excerpts and contents from some Rueben's sources
Expand to View a Sumit Sarkar's opinion of notable and decisive event influensing British policy in India | |||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
and
and
and
and
and
On the some mutiny of the Royal Indian Navy that you say you cant find (a bit surprised I am, because you seem quite well read and with access to info if you cared to look up), Sarkar says
|
I believe you would find similar arguments in Pyarelal's Maharma Gandhi: The Last Phase, (Vol. IX).
Expand to see [Michael Edwardes' opinion in his 1964 Book The last years of British IndiaLondon, Cassell, 1963 (and its review in Journal of Asian studies) on the notable and decisive event influencing British policy in India. | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
Expand to see a synopsis of Niradh Chaudhri's opinion in the Journal Pacific affairs in 1953. |
---|
The INA trials attracted much attention in India and became a rallying point for the independence movement from Autumn 1945 so much so that the release of INA prisoners and suspension of the trials came to be the dominant pollitical campaign in precedence over the campaign for Freedom. ...If any overpowering emotion distinguished India at the end of the war, it was anger at the victory of the United Nations... ...Public resentment had not abated after six months. So on March 7 1946, the day of formal celebration of victory in India, Delhi town hall was partly gutted, Indians in European dresses were set upon, their hats and neckties snatched... ...Opposition to the trial of the officers for treason became a major public and pollitical campaign, and the very opening of the first trial saw violence and series of riots in a scale later described as sensational. It also saw a campaign that defied communal barriers. |
Expand to see how Dr Chandrika Kaul's opinion on her BBC History article. | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
Expand to see Peter Fay's opinion in his 1993 Book The Forgotten Army: India's Armed Struggle for Independence, 1942-1945. University of Michigan Press. | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
Expand to see Lawrence James's opinion in his 1993 Book Raj: The Making and Unmaking of British India. |
---|
|
Expand to see Stephen P. Cohen's opinion in the Journal Pacific Affairs in Summer issue,1973. | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
Expand to see how Stanley Wolpert describes the Indian National Army and the effects of INA trials in his 2005 book India.(pp68) | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
Expand to see how Reinhard Schulze describes the effect of the Indian National Army in his book A Modern History of the Islamic world.(p 130) | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
|
---|
|
Statement by Fowler&fowler (talk · contribs)
Here is the gist of the problem, as I see it. The India page (like many country pages) is the focus of potential edits that are deemed idiosyncratic by a consensus of scholarly opinion. It is my view that what user:Rueben lys is trying to add to the history section of the article constitutes such a idiosyncratic edit, and, consequently, must not be allowed. The (India) page's history section is currently highly compressed, with exactly two sentences devoted to the Indian freedom struggle.
“ | During the first half of the twentieth century, a nationwide struggle for independence was launched by the Indian National Congress and other political organisations. Millions of protesters engaged in mass campaigns of civil disobedience with a commitment to ahimsa, or non-violence, led by Mahatma Gandhi. | ” |
User: Rueben lys feels that this is a one-sided description of the Indian Freedom Movement, which apportions all the credit to the Indian National Congress (INC) and Gandhi, and all action to that taking place in the first half of the twentieth century. He would like the history section to state that the independence struggle began in late 19th century and to include the contributions of other people and movements, in particular that of the Indian National Army (INA), Subhas Chandra Bose, and some revolutionary movements; in addition, he would like some events of 1946 (like the INA trials and the Bombay mutiny) to be mentioned as well.
(I am of course aware of the irony of crafting thousands of words in the defense of two sentences, but I feel that the principle is important; I also foresee similar disputes arising again if we don't clarify some issues.) I have some sympathy for user:Rueben lys's point of view. For example, had I written the two sentences quoted above, they would likely have read:
“ | The nationalist freedom movement in India began in 1885 with the founding of the Indian National Congress. Although many political leaders played roles in the movement, the major direction was provided by Mahatma Gandhi and his movement of mass civil disobedience based on non-violence. | ” |
However, I feel that there is no room in a concise history for the people, organizations, and events that user:Rueben lys wants included. Moreover, I feel there is wide consensus among scholars that the two "mainstreams" in the Indian freedom struggle were the Indian National Congress founded in 1885 and the Muslim League founded in 1906, and leading ultimately to the partition of British India and to the independence for both India and Pakistan. In user:Rueben lys's formulation, however, the mainstreams seem to be "Non-violent" (represented by Gandhi) and "Violent" (represented by assorted revolutionary groups).
An overview of my sources
I have limited my secondary sources to books published either by recognized university presses (e.g. Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press), or by academic publishing houses like Routledge. (See: What is a reliable source?) For my tertiary sources, I have described one signed article each from the History sections of the "India" pages of Encyclopaedia Britannica and Encyclopedia Encarta. (See WP:PSTS.) These, I believe, are the best tertiary sources one can get: not only are they written by experts, but the context of their articles—the history section in an India page—is exactly the same as ours.
In contrast, when user:Rueben lys says he cites Britannica, he is really citing from the article, "Indian National Army," (INA) in the Britannica Student Encyclopaedia. The main EB does not have an article on the INA. Not only is this Student Encyclopaedia article a short (2 page) one written by the Britannica editorial staff, but it is also a "specialty" article, in which you would expect to find references to the article's subject. These kinds of citations, however, confer neither the "notability" nor the "absence of undue weight" needed for inclusion in a "general" overview article like India.
Tertiary Sources: Signed Articles in Britannica and Encarta
In his signed article on "Modern Indian History" in the 2007 Encyclopaedia Britannica, historian Stanley Wolpert of UCLA devotes 19 long pages to the Indian freedom movement, but has just this to say about Bose:
Expand to see paragraph on Bose by Stanley Wolpert: | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
In contrast, the INC and the Muslim League are covered in decisively greater detail:
Expand to see outline of the 19 pages on Indian Freedom Struggle in Britannica: |
---|
|
Similarly, in his signed article, "Movement for Freedom" in Encyclopedia Encarta, historian Philip Oldenburg, of Columbia University, devotes 16 paragraphs to the Indian freedom struggle:
Expand to topic headings of each paragraph of the Encarta article: |
---|
|
Again, there is no mention of Bose, INA, Bhagat Singh, or any other militant. The only reference to "extremism" in the modern sense, is indirectly to the Ghadar party (a radical party founded by Sikhs who were denied immigration to Canada), "A small, mostly Sikh revolutionary movement appeared briefly in Punjab." The overwhelming portion of the text (19 pages in Britannica and 16 paragraphs in Encarta) is devoted primarily to the Indian National Congress and secondarily to the Muslim League.
Secondary Sources: Academic Histories and Research Monographs
This is not just the view of these two historians, it is also the mainstream view. Here are five (searchable) standard histories of India that are used in university courses worldwide. As the search results (in the collapsible box below) indicate, the topics that user:Rueben lys would like included (i.e. "revolutionaries/terrorists/extremists," "Bhagat Singh," "Subhas Bose," "Indian National Army/Azad Hind Fauj," "INA trials," all displayed in boldface) are given little coverage in these books. In contrast "Gandhi," "Jinnah," "Nehru," "Indian National Congress," "Muslim League," Tilak," "Patel," Satyagraha, Non-violence, "Non-cooperation," "Civil disobedience," ... have many more pages devoted to them:
Expand to view eight academic histories of India used in university courses (undergraduate and graduate) around the world. The numbers in parentheses immediately after an individual/topic name indicate the total number of pages in the book that refer to that individual/topic: |
---|
|
Of course, one can find narrow-focus monographs devoted only to Bose or the INA, but producing a citation from such a monograph (as I have already stated above) doesn't make the subject of the monograph notable for a compressed Misplaced Pages history. However, and in contrast, if the standard histories bestow only cursory attention to some topics ("revolutionaries," Bose, "terrorists," INA, INA trials, ...) then it does become a sign of their non-notability.
Research monographs, however, can be useful, if their focus is on other contemporaneous topics (in this case, people or events in India during the first half of the 20th century). If such a book, for example, spends many pages on Gandhi, even though he is not the principal subject, it does so because Gandhi, as a notable contemporaneous figure, infiltrates the circumscribed lives or events of the book's focus. Compressed in the box below, is a list of some recent monographs, which are all searchable on amazon.com. I have added the search results; the number in the parentheses (as before) indicates the number of pages in which that person or topic appears.
Expand to view six research monographs with focus on pre-1947 India. List includes titles, searchable links, and search results: |
---|
|
I feel that the sources—both secondary and tertiary that I have listed—make a strong case that the topics of user:Rueben lys's interest are not notable enough for inclusion in any compressed (Misplaced Pages-like) history of India. Even if we had a few more sentences (say, four or six, instead of the current two), I don't see how his topics would merit inclusion over the others that are deemed more notable. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 20:05, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
Comment by Sarvagnya (talk · contribs):
This issue is increasingly seeming like a storm in a tea cup to me. I took a close look at it and let me try to put it in perspective. Below are results of the exercise I carried out in my sandbox.
- The disputed portion as it was earlier - 1325 bytes
- After Reuben added his bit - 2799 bytes
- After I tried my hand at 'normalizing' the above versions - 1742 bytes
- After my attempts to improve/build upon the 'normalised' version.. hopefully towards a 'consensus' version - 1924 bytes
- ] This is a version that Fowler found, which I am sure with (quite) a bit of editing can be turned into an acceptable version. If you give a couple of days, I will try to edit this into an acceptable, readable and NPOV version that can at least try to reach a consensus and not make PoV statements. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rueben lys (talk • contribs) 13:50, 26 August 2007 No, Rueben, those examples, the work of two banned sockpuppeteers, were meant to illustrate what not to write on Misplaced Pages. Please read the section again. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 20:36, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
Now, since we're also discussing expanding the article anyway, it might be useful if people here took turns editing my sandbox to present what they think it should look like. Once(and if) someone does that, please add your version to the list above.
Note: All the versions above are sans references and wiki formatting which I stripped away for purposes of this exercise. Sarvagnya 04:39, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- You got to be joking. Direct Action day was called by Jinnah who seems conspicuous by his absence in both Reuben lys's version and yours. As for the sentence, "Parallel movements led by radicals such as Subhash Chandra Bose and other revolutionaries also gathered steam," why don't you write to Britannica get them to accept that one sentence in their 19 pages on the Indian freedom struggle. This is not a copy-editing problem. It is a problem of content, being pushed by someone (Rueben lys) who can't even write a coherent RfC. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 05:11, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Which part of "add your versions here" (in red) do you have trouble understanding? I never in the least meant my 'first cut' to be the end of it. Want to add Jinnah? add Jinnah. want to add Pervez Musharaff? add Musharaff. Just stop filling pages with your useless rants. Sarvagnya 06:43, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- You got to be joking. Direct Action day was called by Jinnah who seems conspicuous by his absence in both Reuben lys's version and yours. As for the sentence, "Parallel movements led by radicals such as Subhash Chandra Bose and other revolutionaries also gathered steam," why don't you write to Britannica get them to accept that one sentence in their 19 pages on the Indian freedom struggle. This is not a copy-editing problem. It is a problem of content, being pushed by someone (Rueben lys) who can't even write a coherent RfC. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 05:11, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
Comment by Doldrums (talk · contribs):
agree that this version lends undue weight to the naval mutiny, INA trials and Bose. if the freedom movement has another sentence or two to play around with, we have lots of options to weigh and then pick from (mention legal and political reforms prior to indep., social reforms preceding and accompanying the independence movement, more leaders, notable incidents that fuelled popular opposition, the economic and demographic changes of the 20th century. see the lead in Indian independence movement) and summary style offers a good way to do that.
Spear's (1978) largely political history (not particularly sympathetic of Bose - for eg., "authoritarian leanings") has this to say on the INA and the mutinies in its ~90 pages, 7 chapters on the independence movement -
Those who felt strongest on supported S. C. Bose who fled the country and raised the Indian National Army from Indian prisoners in Japanese hands. He hoped to return as an Indian dictator.
(pp. 215)
Tension steadily mounted to find a focus in the trial of the leaders of Bose's 'National Army' and the brief naval mutiny in February 1946. In the former case the Congress leaders exploited the situation but in the latter, which seems to have been a spontaneous outbreak of youthful extremist exuberance they were embarrassed and did their best to disavow and discourage it. The mutineers complained that the leaders of the cause they were trying to help had betrayed them. The Congress leaders were now fearful lest anarchy supervene before they were able to grasp the reins of government.
(pp. 231)
doesn't look to be enough to trump all other candidates for inclusion and carry the weight it does in this revision. Doldrums 08:09, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- similarly, Metcalf & Metcalf's Concise History of Modern India(page 210), V. P. Menon's Transfer of Power in India(pages 223,225), D N Panigrahi's India's Partition the Story of Imperialism in Retreat(pages 269-270), Śekhara Bandyopādhyāẏa's From Plassey to Partition: A History of Modern India (pages 426-431) give brief accounts of the INA, nothing to indicate that it particularly merits a mention in a 2 (or 4) sentence summary - Bose and the INA would have to jostle for space with many other significant events of the ~100 years. Doldrums 21:36, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
Comments by rueben_lys (talk · contribs):
Wether I can write a coherent RfC as according to Fowler&Fowler is a different issue altogether, wether Fowler is willing to respect his fellow editors and talk in a more dignified tone about people who do not agree with him is what's more irritating me. Also, he is repeatedly accusing me of belonging to the Hindu right, which I am sure will not be bourne out by my edit history and will only embarass Fowler by exposing his ignorance and blind bias. I have explained before that I do not wish to champion Bose, but I do wish to make the history section more comprehensive to reflect a more than just a propaganda statement by non-violence Nazis. The reason why I included the Quit India and the INA is, first of all I have been reading a lot in the last one year on the last years of the Raj, and the consensus here is that the three or four events I have mentioned, particularly the Quit India movement, Red Fort trials and the Bombay mutiny were extremely notable event. Fowler's mother noted that one of my references, Last Days of British India was a popular history book in her childhood and not some random trash from the street. He also accepts that "Indian National Army." the Britannica Student Encyclopedia. is a good source, but is claiming this is not as good as his source. I sourced this directly from the online resources of Encyclopaedia Britannica which has links to both the version on its homepage and am sure is endorsed by the encyclopaedia. My principle and primary sources are Peter Fay's The Forgotten Army: India's Armed Struggle for Independence, 1942-1945, 1993, ISBN 0-472-08342-2 / ISBN 81-7167-356-2, Lawrence James' Raj: The Making and Unmaking of British India ISBN-10: 0312263821. The latter particularly, while quite unsympathetic to the INA or its founder, goes into great detail of the pollitical and ground situations and the unrests during the Quit India, the Red Fort Trial and comments at length on the Bombay mutiny and the deteriorating situation in the armed forces in the wake of the trials and how these were being appraised to and percieved by London and why this meant that in the case of another possible mass agitation by the Congress the army could not be relied upon. My other minor source is Joyce Lebra's Jungle Alliance; Japan And The Indian National Army (1971) ISBN 9971-4-3048-7. I have also used (and cited) article from BBC history by Chandrika Kaul, which itself is pretty succint. Lastly, I am aware of the scale and scope of the events and movement around Bhagat Singh but I do not know enough to write about this. If any other editor does and can incorporate this in the text succintly and NPOVly, I (unlike Fowler) do not have a problem, nor do I wish Bose to be placed on this high pedestal and have every one else removed from the history section. Also, the Pakistan movement was notable enough that at least a few words needs to be included (NPOVdly) about its conception and resolution.
The reason I initially edited was to include the fact that the Gandhian movement, by all means and by far the most prominet, was not the only philosophy, and that the other movements that did exist were by no means non-notable. Why I included INA,trials and the mutiny is because the ideas I got from the books I read (and quite sure this is a justified notion) is that in fact in the last days of the Raj Gandhian as well as the not-so-Gandhian movements and events (endorsed by Gandhi) came into play in a massive scale and hence my edits. I do not wish to address Fowler's rant because it is quite obvious to me he lacks courtesy and respect for most if not all of his fello-editors who have disagreed with him. He has this to say about editors (principally, I believe, me) who have tried to make edits not corresponding with his:
“ | PS In fact the RfC upstairs, echoes these themes. The editor in question would like whittle down the roles of Gandhi and nonviolence and bulk up the (mainly nonexistent) roles of the various violent revolutionaries in the Indian freedom struggle. Part of the problem is that the latterly teeming Hindu Right, which was twiddling its thumbs during all 62 years of the Indian freedom struggle (1885 to 1947), now finds itself left out of that struggle's history. They can't really write themselves in; so they champion the "militants," the "terrorists," and other drifting relics as a counterfoil to Gandhi and nonviolence. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:26, 25 August 2007 (UTC) | ” |
wether that is a POV statement or not is for other readers and editors to decide. But my earlier attempts at discussion with Fowler led him directing me to this link to an earlier discussion between himself and Dwaipayan. What I particularly noticed is Dwaipayan searched and found this link in the Journal of Asian and African studies in the Springerlink database, but did not recognise it as a journal article or that it is from Springerlink (which would make me think it is not just a random website or rant, but a respectable portal). Fowler has claimed in the past that he has access to knowledge databases, but I am very surprised that he did not recognise(???) a springerlink or a Jounral of Asian and African studies article and could not assure Dwaipayan that it might indeed be a genuine. The other thing I noted was that this particular discussion was between only two people, which Fowler put forward as a consensus while I would ask for a larger participation.Rueben lys 13:31, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Fowler also
blindly reverted my edits in the Indian independence movement page, without looking at what I have written or edited, and the version he reverted to just reinforces my view that he has an intensely biased PoV for non-violence and Gandhi and refuses to have anyother facts to be included or even mentioned. I do not have any reason to think this user is at all interested in improving any article and is just out to prove his PoV point and confront and talk down other users.Rueben lys 13:56, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- User:Rueben lys: I of course can't force you to use the collapsible box format for your notes below, but I should warn you that such long rambling notes are not read by anyone (I certainly haven't read them, and I'm the disputant in this RfC), and, in addition, they have the effect of discouraging others from commenting, when they notice that your comments have taken up three times more space than everyone else's put together. You have to learn to make your point in your statement, not drag it out in dribbles in comment after comment. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 05:50, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
With regards to Stanley Wolpert
I am not sure if I am still allowed to make comments, and I do not wish to pick Brownie points or sling mud at any one and do not wish to Champion Bose, but since Fowler's been quoting an article by Stanley Wolpert, just thought I would mention this link I found which is an interview with Wolpert on Rediff. Note that I do not wish to champion Bose and only mention this since Fowler has twice quoted this author and the fact that the author's work indicates that Bose and the INA stuff are not notable:
“ | I am glad to see Bose getting due credit. He has been downplayed, for reasons that had to do with a World War II rationale, and a hatred of certain things that he did or advocated. But he was an extraordinarily great and selfless leader, and his patriotism and his brilliance were second to none. I deal with Bose sympathetically in my book, much against the prevailing dogma of minimizing his contribution | ” |
Please do not take this to mean I am a Bose fanatic etc etc, I just thought I'd mention this since Fowler mentions this author in earlier discussions.Rueben lys 23:02, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- (Reply by Fowler&fowler:)
Expand to view reply by Fowler&fowler: | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rueben lys, This past spring I read Wolpert's latest book, Shameful Flight: The Last Years of the British Empire in India, Oxford University Press, 2006. The book covers the period 1942 to 1948. Of the 238 pages in the book, just one paragraph each is devoted to Bose and the INA trials. Here is Wolpert on Bose:
|
- See reply Below Rueben lys 12:08, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
Consensus among historians
Fowler earlier mentioned that most academics considers the INA insignificant (or doesn't consider it at all).
- This is an article I found by Jon Latimer reviewing Bayly and Harper's FORGOTTEN ARMIES: The Fall of British Asia 1941-1945 in timesonline.co.uk which says
“ | While militarily insignificant, it made most impact after the war, and Indian and American scholars generally accept the view that its role in Indian independence was vital, particularly the political impact of the Delhi trials. | ” |
The book itself is an account of the War in south-east asia, from Malaya through Singapore and Burma to Imphal and back to Singapore, and considers Burmese,Malayasian as well as Indian nationalism. But I will draw attention to the fact that the author categorically states that there is a substantially held view among scholars that the INA, especially its trials, played a vital role in the Indian independence. which I believe disagrees with Fowler's earlier assertion. Rueben lys 00:00, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
Another
Here's another article sourced from The Guardian's book reviews. This is a review by Ian Pindar Mark of Kurlansky's Nonviolence: The History of a Dangerous Idea which says
“ | Gandhi's civil disobedience movement was influential, but it is disingenuous of Kurlansky to ignore the role played by Subhash Chandra Bose's Indian National Army in persuading the British to relinquish the Raj | ” |
Rueben lys 00:18, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
On the weight issue and point of this RfC and not wether Bose was a Nazi
- To Fowler, First of all, I am starting to doubt how "scholarly" your Stanley Wolpert is seeing as he has halved the troops strength of the INA and only found British Indian Soldiers in it (see Indian National Army) Also, the offensive was not stopped by the RAF, but by the IAF (and that's what it was and called, see Indian Air Force), and the 14th Army. Besides, the INA did enter Bengal, reaching Mowdok near Chittagong, it couldn't enter Imphal. Besides, the British did consider the INA to be a very bad influence compared to the Japanese, and had to start "Josh" groups to stop the Indian soldiers from defecting, start circulating propaganda among troops about the INA that said they were Barbaric people who ate their PoWs livers, and in general put a newsban on even mentioning the INA in the media etc...which doesn't really show Wolpert did his homework before publishing. I am not sure anymore that he's a very good historian at all if he cant even count, let alone that he has half digested half vomitted his facts Fowler. Also, Fowler, what does he say about the period between October 1945 and July 1946???
But aside from this please note the original posting I made before intentionally making PoV remarks like "resuscitating Bose" Also,
“ | The fact remains that in his 2006 book, about the period 1942 to 1948, (which included Bose's years of glory that saw him became a mythic hero in Bengal,) Wolpert pretty much ignores Bose. That, for a politician, is a fate worse than death. | ” |
is again open for PoV debate, while I have provided notable historians on India (Fay, Lebra, Majumder, Cohen, Edwards... ) whose Published work (secondary source, in this context) is disagreeing with most of what your scholars have so far said in the encyclopaedias (teriary source in this context).
In the general context of this RfC now. With regards to the weight issue, I am reading up on the wikipedia policy, and this is what I read:
“ | A vital component: good research
Disagreements over whether something is approached neutrally can usually be avoided through the practice of good and unbiased research, based upon the best and most reputable authoritative sources available. Try the library for reputable books and journal articles, and look for the most reliable online resources. A little ground work can save a lot of time justifying a point later. Balance When reputable sources contradict one another, the core of the NPOV policy is to let competing approaches exist on the same page: work for balance, that is: describe the opposing viewpoints according to reputability of the sources, and give precedence to those sources that have been the most successful in presenting facts in an equally balanced manner. |
” |
I have so far (as I have said above) used [[Secondary sources (of notable historians) which are concluding that the INA played a vital role in the independence movement, and is held prominently within India. Fowler has so far provided either provided tertiary sources that do not evaluate or inlcude the INA, or have provided a One secondary source and umpteenth tertiary sources that argue that Bose was Fascist or a dictator etc etc (which is not the issue under consideration here) and that His army was a failed military enterprise. (which is not the issue under consideration here either). I like the way the original point has now been twisted to try and have me defend wether "Bose should be included" instead of wether there are other view points that deserve inclusion in addition to the view that Congress was the soul driving force. Reiterating what the RfC was about. Fowler's repeatedly reverted versions say
- The movement started in the first decades of the twentieth century (Dates wrong by about 50 years, only includes the Congress inspired movement).
- That the Congress started the movement (It did not, political movement started long before the congress even existed. It only became a strong force after Gandhi arrived after the WW I).
- Millions of people engaged in civil disobedience with a commitment to Gandhi's philosophy of Ahimsa. (Only one movement and Point of View presented, opposed to the contention there were other notable movements and philosophies).
- My edits, including, explaining, and summarising the notable events which secondary sources from reputable authors agree were key points in the movement have been reverted after repeatedly accusing me of bing a PoV pusher, Saffronist, right wing, and one occasion, of not being able to write a coherent RfC.
I have given the sources I used to come to the conclusion that other movements deserve to be mentioned, most notabillity, but not only nationalist sentiments and the political fallouts of the Quit India, INA trials, and (in my opinion, agreed to by Lawrence James' account of the rise and fall of British Raj- which the idnependence movement is all about anyway) the Bombay Mutiny.
Now first of all, the independence movement section does not mention anything but Gandhi and Congress the reason being cited is that it is
- a. An FA,
- b. Other encyclopaedias do not mention anything in detail but Gandhi and Congress. First of all, the wikipedia policy on sources say that encyclopaedias are tertiary sources and synthesise materials and opinions, and a Historians interpretation of an event or movement is more acceptable. On the latter, the statement has been made that "most historians" agree that the movements I mentioned in my edits, in fact nothing but the Gandhian movement, was important at all. This statement is being supported by a encyclopaedias and books on India, and not on the independence movement (on which the paragraph is based), and then the argument is being put forward that "we don't have space" so we can only include this view". The references I have given, ie, books on the movement and on parts of the movement do actually calculate the weight and notabillity and categorically makes statements that disagree with the implied meaning of not including the other aspects.
I have also provided opinions of other notable authors that says something totally opposite about the consensus that Fowler mentions among "academics and Scholars". Rueben lys 11:49, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
Another from Britannica on Indian independence movement, about weight
Here's another article from Britannica which I believe makes Indian independence movement concise as well as puts due weight to everything. With regards to Fowler's above comment of
“ |
|
” |
- a. You're not the topic of the dispute, the content of the article's paragraph is. But yes, you're attitude towards ownership of the article and general incivillity, lack of Etiquette, citiing spurious concerns and general threatening words and tone is irritating and a general hindrance towards a collaboration. I am giving you evidence here, and miraculously your arguments have changed from your so called scholar (who can't count and half vomits history) to pretending that my arguments are not worth addressing with facts and arguments based on facts.Rueben lys 12:14, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
More secondary sources relevant to the topic
I am a bit surprised on a few things:
- a. The number of pages on wierdly allied topics has yielded research monographs on the topic of the Indian independence movement and notabillity.
- b.That highly specialised and economico-historical topics like "Hindu Nationalism and the Language of Politics in Late Colonial India", "Imperial Power and Popular Politics: Class, Resistance and the State in India, 1850-1950", "The Indian Princes and their States" etc have all of a sudden become "focussed" articles on India and the Indian independence movement and,
- c. I am being repeatedly told that "the consensus among the scholars is that these were not at all notable stuff and did not have any bearing whatsoever on relinquishing the Raj" without having provided a single reference that such a consensus has been reached. I have, on the other hand, provided two referenced comments by the those among the very scholars that the consensus says exactly opposite. I have mentioned these here and here, published in well known publications. As for secondary sources on the topic, this what Sumit Sarkar's Modern India, 1885-1947 has to say on the question of what were notable (verbatim):
“ | In November 1945, a British move to put the INA men on trial immediately sparked off massive demonstrations all over the country. Even more significant was the probable link between the INA experience and the wave of disaffection in the British Indian army during the winter of 1945-46, which culminated in the great Bombay Naval strike on February 1946 and was quite possibly the sinlge most decisive reason behind the British decision to make a quick withdrawal | ” |
(Sarkar, pp 411)
and
“ | The decisive shift in British policy really came about under mass pressure in Autumn and Winter of 1945-46 - the same month Pererel Moon while editing Wavell's journal (Vicerory's journal)(Chapter VIII) has perceptively described as "The edge of a Volcano". Very foolishly, The British initially decided to hold public trials of dismissing from service and detaining without trial no less that 7000:Mansergh, Vol. VI, pp49-51). They compounded the folly by holding the first trial in the Red Fort, Delhi in November 1945, and putting on the dock together a Hindu, a Muslim, and a Sikh (P.K. Sehgal, Shah Nawaz, Gurbaksh Singh Dhillon). Bhulabhai Desai, Tejbahadur Sapru and Nehru apperared for teh defence (the latter putting on his barrister's gown fter 25 years), and the Muslim league also joined the countrywide protest. On 20 November, an intelligence Bureau note admitted that "There has seldom been a matter which has attracted so much public interest and, it is safe to say, sympathy...this particular brand of sympathy cuts across communal barriers." | ” |
(Sarkar, pp-419)
and
“ | The British became extremely nervous about the INA spirit spreading to the Indian army, and in Janurary the Punjab Governor reported that a Loahore reception for released INA prisoners had been attended by Indian soldiers in uniform | ” |
(Sarkar pp420)
and
“ | Asaf Ali in a private conversation in october was reported to have explained that his party "would lose much ground in the country" unless it took up their cause | ” |
(Sarkar, pp420)
and
“ | The British for their part realised the need for some concessions. On 1 December, it was announced that only INA members accused of murder or brutal treatment of fellow-prisoners would henceforward be brought trial (instead of the sweeping charge of "waging war against the King" used in the first case) and imprisonment sentences passed against the first batch were remitted in January | ” |
and
“ | The turning-point, which "caused at least a temporary detente" (Wavell to George VI,31 December, Mansergh Vol.VI pp713) came with popular explosion in Calcutta on the INA issue 21-23 November 1945, which set a pattern of periodic upheavals in that city which went on for about a decade and are reminescent of the famou journees or "days" in Paris during the French revolution. | ” |
On the some mutiny of the Royal Indian Navy that you say you cant find (a bit surprised I am, because you seem quite well read and with access to info if you cared to look up), Sarkar says
“ | The greatest threat of all, however, was the naval mutiny in Bombay on 18-23 February 1946 - one of the most truly heroic, if largely forgotten, episodes in our freedom struggle. | ” |
I believe you would find similar arguments in Pyarelal's Maharma Gandhi: The Last Phase, (Vol. IX).
These sit in addition to the preceding secondary sources by notable historians I have provided earlier, who have written on the topic.
Now tell me Fowler, in the pages that you say you find mention of Bose(on the relevant topic and not the books on wether Gungadin was Behari or Gujerati), what does it say. Show me what the factual (cited, not assumed as you would like us to have by quoting the number of pages) arguments are and who it is made by. Incidentally, you still haven't told me what Stan Wolpert says about the period between September 1945 and November 1946.Rueben lys 20:26, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
On sources
I can see that the issue of notabillity has become an issue of coverage. My point was notabillity on the basis of what is said (ie, what's the argument), ie does it find mention to be significant . I have quoted what my sources say, Fowler so far hasn't. That has rapidly been converted into how many pages is devoted to the issues. The issue that the "non-violent" philosophy and movement was a major movement is not the debate. The debate was, are is or was there anything else notable? Did there happen anything outside the Non-violent movement (Quit India being a major point, INA trials being another) that profoundly had an effect on the Independence movement and the Raj? and if they are, are they notable enough to be mentioned in this. I can see Fowler has a point with regards to coverage, I cant make Fowler see that I have a point on the basis of argument. What have the author said??? I have said what my references say, which allows the judgement of wether it satisfies notabillity or not. I dont see any of Fowler's sources saying anything. Of course, for the major part the stuff that find mention in the books that Fowler quotes . Nothing has been said on what the books say and because Fowler has convinced (impressively, I will say in appreciation) that others dont get coverage. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rueben lys (talk • contribs) 12:26, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
- Here's the review of Markovits's book in the Journal of Asian Studies which says it focusses heavily on the French role in India, as well as other criticisms of the book which might raise doubts as to how much it is a text book all over the world. Incidentally it also says as a Text Book it does not compare well with more recent and far more historigraphical work like those of Metcalfe and Metcalfe.Rueben lys 13:07, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
- Here's a review of Peter Robb's book in the Journal of South Asian studies, which says there will be inevitable discomfort at the ommission of details and then says it is an excellent book on the Development of society, economics and pollitics in Modern India. It is an examination of Modern-Nation-state-style western democracy and Indian-traditional-religious dichotomy of modern India. I am not entirely sure why this would be a study of The Raj and the Indian independence movement. It seems more social history to me.Rueben lys 13:20, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
- I couldn't find a review of Sugata Bose's book yet (I am looking), but I did come accross this article by him in the Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 38, No. 1. which addresses some of the earlier comments you made regadring Bose's own newphew etc etc.
- Kulke and Dortmund's History of India (Paperback)] has this:
One chapter on the Freedom movement and partition, broken up into the sections
- 1 para on te ealriest stuff preceding the mutiny of 1857 followed by the followng sections:
- Neo Hinduism and Muslim resentment (1 page in total)
- A new Generation of liberal nationalists (Mostly the period before the congress)- nearly two pages.
- Vedanta Karmayoga and National revolutionaries (Vivekanada etc)- one page.
- Partition of Bengal and rise of extremism. Nearly two pages.
- 1st world war and the Home rule league one page.
- Gandhi and Non-cooperation. Nearly 3 pages.
- Swaraj in One year (part of the Congress story). Nearly two pages.
- Return to the constitutional arena. two pages. Includes the rise of extremeist views within the Congress, and describes Bose and Nehru as the leaders in this new trend. Gives equal coverage (give or take a sentence) to Nehru and Bose.
- Civil-disobedience and Gandhi-Irwin pact. two pages.
- Frustration at the round table and the communal award two pages.
- The pros and cons of office acceptance. Includes the policies of the Congress as well as the princes in 1936 and also describes the effect of Bose standing for re-election as Congress President at Tripuri. (I am going by what it says and not how many times it mentions Bose or Gandhi.)Same space given toNehru, the left wing of the Congress and the plans for election and office.
- Second world war, the Cripp's mission and 'Quit India' Three and a half page in total, again with the mentions of Bose at the end.
- 1 para on te ealriest stuff preceding the mutiny of 1857 followed by the followng sections:
(Incidentally I think this is the same book that Fowler mentions in his search. I am surprised the independence movement is condensed to one chapter, which is totally opposite the idea I got from Fowler's post. Using stats has an old adage, it covers up the facts, "what do they say, Fowler, I ask again")
- I cannot find any Journal reviews of Spears book, but I did find one on the The Oxford History of India edited by among others, Percival Spear. I believe if Fowler said what is says, we will see that a lot of aspects of the non-violent nature) preceding and co-existing with the Congress led movement would be found. Particularly, I believe, the there's an issue about how the Raj ended. What does the book say is the question. Ie, what aspects does it find notable?
The notable thing are that Kulke follows closely my original edit that expanded it to one para. Sercondly, going By the Ingenious mechanisms of not judging on what the author says but instead on how many times he menions a name, yeah, I would say DNA is the most famous thing in the world, but is it? I am going to stop here for the time being, but let me just say I am thoroughly surprised at the disingenuous argument being used here (See Kulke and Dortmund for example) to twist both what is actually written and what is implied. The stats are not showing what the books are saying, and as Kulke's book shows, it looks like there's so much on everyone like Gandhi and Nehru. In reallity, in the book, the independence movement has one chapter, and a lot more than just the congress led post-1920s movement is described there, as is there more than just Gandhi. I can see how the statistics are being used to hide behind the truth. Incidentally, we have Fowler's word that these are all "Text Books" in all the university around the world (I am sure they are by notable authors).Rueben lys 14:20, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
More sources
Here are ten more sources where the authors express the opinion (without counting pages or number of lines or sitting down with a calculator) that the allied movements had considerable impacts, as well as that the INA trials are considerable importance if not expressing the opinion that it was one of the decisive events in shift of British policy.
- Encyclopaedia of India's Struggle for Freedom
by Jagdish Saran Sharma - 1971]
- Forgotten Heroes of India's Freedom Struggle: A Who's Who, British Secret Documents.Pran Nath Chopra - 1992
- Conflict in Asia: Korea, China-Taiwan, and India-Pakistan.2003 Uk Heo, Shale Asher Horowitz.
- India. by Stanley A. Wolpert.2005.
- Indian Summer.Wilfrid W. Russell.1951.
- The End of the War in Asia.by Louis Allen.1979.
- India's Struggle for Freedom: Role of Associated Movements. Pran Nath Chopra.
- Dominion India in World Perspectives, Economic and Political. by Benoy Kumar Sarkar.1949.
- Changing India: Bourgeois Revolution on the Subcontinent.Robert W. Stern. History. 2003.
- Tradition Never Dies: The Genesis and Growth of the Indian Army..by Sundar Singh Bawa.1972.
I think I can show that the historians hold these of considerable importance, inclusing Stan Wolpert (the question that Fowler wouldn't answer). So far opposing we have been given the text of a few encyclopaedia articles which leads to the "assumption" that there's nothing else that's anymore important, or been given a list of books and the calculation of how many times the names are mentioned, "without being told what the authors views or arguments are".No reference has been given that says only the Congress and Gandhi movement was notable and had an impact. I have said what and where these arguments have been made. I have shown that there's consensus that there's more that just the non-violence and congress to the movement that had a significant impact. In addition, that the attempt at statistization has misrepresented the views of the author I have shown above with regards to Kurke and Dortmunds book as well as another which I did not list the content but have menioned by name. The argument being put forward is that it can be assumed from the stats, but I have shown that the stats are hiding the authors actual views and arguments.Rueben lys 18:22, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
- you are welcome to rely on evaluations rather than coverage, but then you have to compare these evaluations with those of all the other notable people/events of the time (for eg. Nehru, Muslim league & Jinnah, the social reform movement, Lal-Bal-Pal, Ambedkar, the famines, the partition of Bengal) to decide what to include, not decide on the basis of evaluations of people/events you've already chosen. Doldrums 10:39, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
Comments by: John Kenney (talk · contribs)
I don't know that I have much expertise on this, but it seems to me that in such a short history section as we have, the version previously existing is more or less appropriate. If the discussion of the independence movement is to be expanded, it seems to me that we should use the extra space to talk about Jinnah and the Muslim League, and to better explain the background of partition, rather than to talk about Bose, et al. john k 15:13, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
Comments by Abecedare:
I think we have two different issues here:
- One, which for example Sarvagnya writes about, is whether the Indian history section (and the Independence movement sections is particular) can/should be expanded. On this I don't think there is any strong opposition, and I think we can even double the two sentences to paint a broader picture without raising length issues.
- The second question is if we should use the extra space to mention INA, Red Fort Trials, Subhash Chandra Bose, Bhagat Singth etc (as Rueben lys recommends), Jinnah and Muslim League (as John Kenney suggests) or something else altogether. The specific answer to this is not obvious, but the method for determining the answer is quite clearly determined by wikipedia policy. Specifically:
- We need to look at reputable academic texts on (modern) Indian history and see what topics they give the most space/weightage to and reflect that here. F&f has already initiated such a survey from which it seems that INA, Bose, etc will not be at the top of the list of topic to be included; others of course, are welcome to propose other reputable sources.
- However we should be very careful that we don't base our judgment on specialized studies of various persons and/or incidents during the independence struggle, or on popular histories that often reflect an (intentionally) idiosyncratic take on the topic (read for example, Freedom at midnight). I am certain that we can find specialized books on Lord Mountbatten, Rabindranath Tagore, Sarojini Naidu, Clement Attlee or even possibly FDR/Harry Truman that understandably emphasize their influence or role in India's gaining independence - such information may be worthy of inclusion in the person's biographical article - but will not merit a discussion here, since the issue is not simple verifiabality but due weight.
Abecedare 17:33, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Agreed. In addition, research monographs on other contemporaneous topics or events (first half of the 20th century) can be used to confer notability. Here is a list of some recent monographs, all of which are searchable on amazon.com. Simply type "Gandhi," "Nehru," "Jinnah," "Patel," "Quit India," "Bose", "Azad," "Indian National Army" "Militants," "Revolutionaries," and so forth, and see how many pages in the book have entries on those subjects:
Expand to view six research monographs about with focus on pre-1947 India. List includes titles, searchable links, and search results: |
---|
|
- As you say, I have already (in my statement) compiled a list of five general histories, which too can be searched for references to "Bose," or "Gandhi," or "Militants," and the like. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 10:44, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
Subscript text
Comments by Sundar (talk · contribs)
Following are my comments.
- The article as it stands needs more breadth than depth--so few "dimensions" covered. So, a significant part of any increase in prose should go to things that are already wanting to be covered than one of the sections here. That said, I'm not averse to adding a little more prose to the history section and copyediting it.
- Proportion of coverage on Bose is a complex issue. He is, as it is, under covered outside of Misplaced Pages. That either could be reflecting his actual relative notability or could be due to some systemic bias. If it's the latter case, we're not a primary source tasked to correct that anomaly. That would border on OR. So, IMO, he, along with others not excluding Jinnah merit a mention, but not on par with Gandhi's movement. More detailed coverage belongs in Indian independence movement, not here.
- I don't subscribe to the view that it should be defeatured to allow a liberal editing or that it should be allowed to be messed up before copyediting. It's not just because it's an FA, but also because it is one of the most widely read articles (I had seen some data a few months back.).
- For the same reason as above, the {{controversial}} tag is an eyesore and must be quickly removed after taking appropriate remedial measures.
I'd request all interested parties to let go of personal differences and arrive at a consensus towards improving this important article. -- Sundar 07:46, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
Comments by Hornplease (talk · contribs)
Fowler's extracts are indicative that mention of Bose has no place in a few paragraphs on the independence movement. If the section is expanded, it should expand to cover moves towards self-government, 1935 Act, the Quit India Movement and the pressures leading to partition. Misplaced Pages is not where we right great wrongs.Hornplease 22:42, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
- I really am not sure what the user directly below me is trying to say. Hornplease 03:59, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
- Easy, Fowler. I don't think I have ever seen a case made as thoroughly as yours. I think we can declare this closed, surely? Reuben, it appears the weight of (page) numbers is against you this time. Hornplease 06:18, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
- Reuben, the stats are not hiding the actual views in this case. The stats are too overwhelming. You are yet to demonstrate that one of the authors has indicated that "this was equivalent in impact to the Muslim League", or "greater in impact than the Congress ministries following the GOI act of 1935" etc. Obviously, you won't. Because it wasn't. Hornplease 00:17, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Easy, Fowler. I don't think I have ever seen a case made as thoroughly as yours. I think we can declare this closed, surely? Reuben, it appears the weight of (page) numbers is against you this time. Hornplease 06:18, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
Comments by Lara bran (talk · contribs)
Bose and Bhagat Singh deserve mention, as non-non-violation movement. Some people call them terrorists, but they dint kill not a single innocent people like current terrorists. They certainly deserve mention alongside non-violence movements. Current history section states only one type of independence movement was present i.e. non-violence. All quit india etc were non-violence. Both these leaders can be mentioned in single sentence. Lara_bran 03:43, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
- Current version gives false impression that only non-violence movement was there in freedom struggle, which is not true. What type had major effect is secondary, but non-non-violent protest certainly deserves mention, at least as second sentence. Thanks. Lara_bran 07:15, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
That hideous military thing
I take strong objection to the positioning of "Foreign relations and the military", complete with a photograph of the ugliest things humans do to each other, so early in what is otherwise a worthy article. Thus, it's framed here as more important than geography, economy, demographics and culture. I see that an argument can be made that FR and the M leads on from "Politics", but then so does "(Political) Subdivisions". Apparently, the section was added, or least the photo was, only last year. Check who did it. Subtle reframing of WP is causing a scandal in Australia and probably elsewhere at the moment, now that we have the tools to expose politicians and organisations that try to skew WP their way.
So I'm making a plea that Indians present to the world, and themselves, what most people think are the really valuable contributions to humanity, before showing boys' toys that anyone can buy from the merchants with a bit of cash.
Slightly related to this, I'd be inclined to relocate flora and fauna further down; but I haven't thought that through fully.
Yes, I think you could gradually and carefully expand a few sections, with consensus. Geography seems slim. So does demographics. There are MOS breaches in the use of hyphens for year ranges.
The article might orginally been modelled on that for Australia, but let's not take that as a permanent prescription. India is a very different kettle of fish. Tony 01:22, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- The military section (complete with the phallic obscenity) was the brainchild of some editors who felt very strongly about having it. The same people who have allowed it to stand, however, fought tooth and nail to remove a beautiful picture of the Apatani tribals on the grounds that Indians don't look like that, and are also now champing at the bit to remove the picture of the Toda hut on the grounds that Indian don't live in huts like that (see discussion here). This, however, is par for the course. The country itself is in the throes of a neurosis. The Indian newspapers, for example, (according to the NYT) have been writing story after story on the travails of a Bollywood actor who has been jailed or about to be jailed; however, not a peep has been heard about the 14 million people (without insurance or social security) who have lost everything in the recent floods. Finally, as someone who along with user:Saravask wrote the Flora and Fauna section, I am dismayed that you want to move it further down. :) The Indian plant and animal world is something India can be truly proud of. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 02:34, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- PS In fact the RfC upstairs, echoes these themes. The editor in question would like whittle down the roles of Gandhi and nonviolence and bulk up the (mainly nonexistent) roles of the various violent revolutionaries in the Indian freedom struggle. Part of the problem is that the latterly teeming Hindu Right, which was twiddling its thumbs during all 62 years of the Indian freedom struggle (1885 to 1947), now finds itself left out of that struggle's history. They can't really write themselves in; so they champion the "militants," the "terrorists," and other drifting relics as a counterfoil to Gandhi and nonviolence. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:26, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
Most of the militants in Indian freedom struggle had centrist ot leftist leanings, including Subhash Bose or Bhagat Singh. It is wrong to club them together with Savarkar. Fowler&fowler should not rest his views on a reaction to present Hindu Right. INC (Indian National Congress) took decades to understand that freedom struggle should be something more than annual cocktail parties. There was a long history of freedom struggles, beginning from Sanyāsi Revolt of ~1770 and many peasant and tribal revolts (culminating in 1857 rebellion in which millions of peasants also participated), which many "mainstream historians" ignore. Why textbooks prescribed by organisations like NCERT (National Council of Educational and Research Training) cannot be considered "mainstream view"? Gandhi symbolised the most important component of India's freedom struggle, but there were others too who should not be neglected. The whole group of Gandhi was defeated by Subhas democratically in the election of INC President, which reflects the mood of mainstream India, and it was in response to this changing mood that Quit India movement was launched. Quit India movement was spontaneous, because the leadership was within bars before the movement started. A large number of Indians had volunteered for INA (after its foundation with the help of 40000 war captives) which the scholarly version cited by Fowler&fowler ignores. I think Fowler&fowler should favour a more balanced account of India's freedom movement. Bhagat Singh's group was insignificant, but the impact of Bhagat Singh was enormous. These are not my POV, but based on the consensus of leading historians responsible for framing India's history textbooks (NCERT). If this article needs slight expansion for reflecting well sourced facts, it should be done, carefully. -Vinay Jha 04:50, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, I am aware of Bose's political leanings. See my original post here. As for the NCERT books, I note they are high-school books. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 09:23, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Next thing I am going to hear is that Vinay Jha is a puppet of Kuntan. His name sounds very similar to a deputy puppet master of Kuntan. Confused boy, drop the nationalistic scales from your eyes and look at the professor. That might be enlightenment for you. 59.91.254.21 10:05, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- No one wants to belittle the role of Gāndhi; Gāndhi taught a defeated and unarmed people to rise against a mighty empire. No other participant in the freedom struggle can match Gandhi's role. What Fowler&Fowler is missing is that NCERT textbooks reflect the consensus among topmost Indian historians on contentious issues. No single author can be authorized to reflect the academic consensus. No one has ever charged NCERT of nationalistic bias &c. A reader above has used derogatory remarks for me above("sockpuppet,boy") just because I asked for following the consensus and not some lopsided accounts. Jinnah's role also needs to be accounted for. He was forced to change his course after he was cheated by Nehru &c after 1937 elections. During the last decades of British rule, Gāndhi, Jinnāh and Subhās were most influential persons, in descending order, although the control of Gāndhi over Congress itself was weakining in his last days. We must not forget Gāndhi opposed partition but all his prominent disciples abandoned him. India was ruled militarily, and the importance of Naval Mutiny cannot be belittled. -Vinay Jha 11:44, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Vinay, just dont lose sleep over trolls calling you names. Next time you see such trolling, just revert them or ignore them and move on. Dont dignify their trolling with responses. See WP:DFTT. Sarvagnya 18:37, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Vinay, Yes simply ignore such attention-seeking IP trolls. As for, "No one has ever charged NCERT of nationalistic bias &c." - please read NCERT controversy. Of course the NCERT textbook debate is off-topic here and hopefully will not be resurrected on this page :-) Abecedare 18:49, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Vinay, just dont lose sleep over trolls calling you names. Next time you see such trolling, just revert them or ignore them and move on. Dont dignify their trolling with responses. See WP:DFTT. Sarvagnya 18:37, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- No one wants to belittle the role of Gāndhi; Gāndhi taught a defeated and unarmed people to rise against a mighty empire. No other participant in the freedom struggle can match Gandhi's role. What Fowler&Fowler is missing is that NCERT textbooks reflect the consensus among topmost Indian historians on contentious issues. No single author can be authorized to reflect the academic consensus. No one has ever charged NCERT of nationalistic bias &c. A reader above has used derogatory remarks for me above("sockpuppet,boy") just because I asked for following the consensus and not some lopsided accounts. Jinnah's role also needs to be accounted for. He was forced to change his course after he was cheated by Nehru &c after 1937 elections. During the last decades of British rule, Gāndhi, Jinnāh and Subhās were most influential persons, in descending order, although the control of Gāndhi over Congress itself was weakining in his last days. We must not forget Gāndhi opposed partition but all his prominent disciples abandoned him. India was ruled militarily, and the importance of Naval Mutiny cannot be belittled. -Vinay Jha 11:44, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
- Next thing I am going to hear is that Vinay Jha is a puppet of Kuntan. His name sounds very similar to a deputy puppet master of Kuntan. Confused boy, drop the nationalistic scales from your eyes and look at the professor. That might be enlightenment for you. 59.91.254.21 10:05, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
India, third most referenced country page
India was the third most referenced country article (after the US and the UK) for the period January 2007 to May 2007. (I have not included the statistics for June, July and August 2007 because during the summer vacation, the college and high-school students, who drive the referencing on Misplaced Pages seem to have other interests like Chris Benoit and Paris Hilton). The country rankings for this period are:
- 1. United States, 2. United Kingdom, 3. India, 4. Japan, 5. France, 6. Australia, 7. Germany, 8. Italy, 9. Mexico
Here are the country statistics. The format is: Country Rank, Country Name, (Overall Rank), Total number of times page was accessed.
- May 2007, 1. United States (7) 38, 903; 2. Japan (20), 20,129; 3. India (25), 18,194; 4. United Kingdom (26), 18,194; 5. France (39), 16,452; 6. Germany (46), 15,677; 7. Mexico (55), 14,903; 8. Canada (61), 14,129; 9. Australia (63), 13,742; 10. Italy (76), 12,581.
- April 2007. 1. United States (7), 34,400; 2. United Kingdom (28), 21,200; 3. India (45), 16,800; 4. Canada (46), 16,800; 5. Germany (50), 16,400; 6. France (64), 14,600; 7. Italy (72), 13 800 ± 12% (no more in top 100).
- March 2007 1. United States, (7), 33,871; 2. Japan (34), 16,645; 3. United Kingdom (36), 16,258; 4. France (48), 14,323; 5. India (55), 13,935; 6. Australia (56), 13,742; 7. Canada (64), 13,355; 8. Dubai, 12,000; 9. Ireland (84), 11,806; 10. Russia (88), 11,613.
- February 2007 1. United States (6), 37,714; 2. Italy (30), 16,286; 3. Canada (32), 15,857; 4. Japan (34), 15,214; 5. United Kingdom (39), 14,357; 6. India (60), 12,214; 7. France (69), 11,571; 8. China (82), 10,500; 9. Australia (87), 10,286; 10. Germany (96), 10,071.
- January 2007 1. United States (6), 44,903; 2. United Kingdom (31), 21,484; 3. India (36), 19,744; 4. Japan (39), 18,774; 5. Canada (40), 18,581; 6. Australia (59), 16,645; 7. Mexico (84), 14,323; 8. Spain (86), 14,323; 9. China (91), 13,935; 10. Germany (98), 13,355.
India's rank steadily improved in Fall 2006, when Nichalp, Saravask, Ragib, Ganeshk, Sundar, Chanakyathegreat, and I reduced the article in size (from 52 KB in September 2006 to 35 KB in mid-November), improved the prose, and began to watch new additions more carefully. See the statistics here. The new statistics show that the editors (like Abecedare, Universe=atom, and KnowledgeHegemony) who came on board in 2007 are doing a superb job as well. (See here, and type India in search box.) For those who complain about the article, and want more of both pictures and prose, here are two examples from the days when a tight ship was not being run and the India page's rank was floundering: Example 1 (Prose), Example 2 (Pictures), please scroll. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 10:37, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- What a find! Excellent! Ofcourse the current page is not critical, rather better than good. But a little expansion won't hurt. We can use some prose and pictures from the 2 versions you have brought (if they meet standards of WP:SS and WP:MOS). We all know day by day the standards are being raised. KnowledgeHegemony 13:03, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- No, no. The examples that I have given above are example of how not to write in Misplaced Pages. The pictures were added by noted sockpuppetteer User:Hkelkar and the prose by slightly less noted sockpuppetteer User:Himalayanashoka. They are the last things you want to use as models! :) (This is for Rueben lys, who is about to start editing these pages). Fowler&fowler«Talk» 14:00, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- I was talking on the prose written in the Culture section. I liked that. As for the pics Brihadisvara Temple and the Sanchi stupa stand out. I am talking about this version. I commented on them without seeing the additions by the sockpuppets. You could have shown a more stable version if you wanted :)KnowledgeHegemony 12:20, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
- What a find! Excellent! Ofcourse the current page is not critical, rather better than good. But a little expansion won't hurt. We can use some prose and pictures from the 2 versions you have brought (if they meet standards of WP:SS and WP:MOS). We all know day by day the standards are being raised. KnowledgeHegemony 13:03, 26 August 2007 (UTC)
- Yes, I agree. My apologies. Also, I should have explained the context. From June 2006 until mid-November 2006, Nichalp took a long wikibreak and some other regular editors took short wikibreaks. In their absence, the "caretakers" managed as best they could; however, the IPs, the drive-bys, the various POV-warriors and their sockpuppets, and some well-meaning new editors like me, managed to slowly fatten-up the article from the 30 KB stable version to a 52 KB version. The stable version then, which was the version of early June 2006, was more or less the same as the current version (but without the Military, Flora and Fauna, and the current lead). No new level of stability or equilibrium was reached during Nichalp's absence and upon his return, he had to do a partial roll-back.
- There is still no consensus (in this recent flurry of posts on these pages) to expand in the manner suggested in Blnguyen's original post. People with long wikipedia experience (like user:Taxman, user:Tony1, and user:John Kenney who have commented above in the "expansion" sections), have not exactly endorsed that kind of an expansion. And I have no doubt that when user:Nichalp, user:Ragib, and user:Saravask return after their current wiki-breaks, what they are going to say.
- I am not saying that nothing can change or that anyone owns anything, but simply that even if consensus is achieved to increase the size of the article by say 20%, we will need to decide how the new space will be used: to expand the pre-existing sections, or to add new sections (and, if so, which). There are many potential new sections like "Science and Technology in India," "Public Health in India," and "Sports in India," (to name three) that await their creation. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 13:53, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
Statement by Sumanch (talk · contribs)
Flower, you reverted my edit] in the Indian History section. Can you please give me an explanation?
I had written this covering the Indian History from the start of the independence movement and ending with the declaration of republic in three paragraphs. This section was based on facts and whenever I made a claim, I provided reference. I will appreciate your response.
Sumanch 02:28, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
- I reverted it because it was unencyclopedic (i.e. poorly written, poorly spelled, and full of biased statements); besides, there is no consensus yet to expand the history section. You are welcome to discuss what you are up to on this talk page. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 04:04, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
Controversial tag
As User:Sundar wrote above in the RFC, the tag in the History section is an eyesore and I personally see little reason for having it. I realize that User:Rueben lys feels that certain aspects of the Indian independence movement are not represented in the article, and while I see the merits of discussing the issue to see if and what needs to be added to the paragraph, I don't think the current section is controversial. Would others agree with me that the controversial tag should be removed on this high traffic article which is read by 100's of readers everyday ? Abecedare 07:58, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
- yes. while more comprehensive, yet concise summaries are always welcome, there's nothing to merit a "controversial" tag on the current version. a better way to draw editors to try and improve on this is already under way - couple of RfCs called, posting on the India-related noticeboard . Doldrums 08:33, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
- To be honest, I was forced to put the controversial tag because one editor has ended repeatedly reverting every attempt I made to expand that paragraph, and then accusing me (and subsequent editors) of PoV pushing in a very derogatory manner. Upping Bose is not my point, delieneating this article from the very biased and narrow statement that the independence paragraph makes out to be is. Incidentally,
- You will notice, the argument consistently given by the same ditor every time this paragraph is expanded are the same (ie, unencyclopaedic, biased and not with good references).
- He has also ignored the fact that he has so far provided tertiary sources as supporting his claims that there is a consensus that nothing else is notable, compared to other (especially mine) secondary sources (see Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources) which disagrees with his claims of consensus.
- He has also claimed consensus without being able to provide any secondary source reference, and then claimed (quite disingenuously) his argument is satisfied by weight of coverage which was again derived from his tertiary sources.
- I have provided secondary sources that supported my claims of consensus, as well as belied this editors claims of academic consensus.
- He has then attempted to argue that since Bose (who was mentioned once in the edit I made) is a Nazi and non-notable (which I am sure if you told any Indian he would laugh at you) anything to do with him is not includable in this article, which doesn't really address the point of wether anything else is notable (including, but not only, Bose and his contributions) and twists the argument.
- Also, I have provided secondary sources that disagree quite significantly from this editors point of view,
- I suspect there's a deep PoV pushing going on here. Because what this editor keeps arguin, is that anything else included is PoV pushing. I would like this tag reinstated till the RfC is resolved, since I would like a discussion on this issue. Rueben lys 10:43, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
- Having the tag on has nothing to do with the RfC. I think there's a clear consensus here. Hornplease 22:35, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
Time to close the RfC?
It has been over a week since the RfC began. As of today there have been seven responses. Of these, at best, only two—by Sarvagnya (talk · contribs) and Lara_bran (talk · contribs)—are sympathetic to user:Rueben lys; the remaining, five—those of Doldrums (talk · contribs), Abecedare (talk · contribs), Sundar (talk · contribs), John Kenney (talk · contribs), Hornplease (talk · contribs)— are not.
I have given a rigorous list of both secondary sources here and tertiary sources here, as well as visual displays of how much each topic is covered in the aggregate by these sources. I did this in part because I wanted to clarify things for myself. Rueben lys (talk · contribs) now claims that while I might have demonstrated "coverage," I have not demonstrated "notability." All I can say is that if a book devotes 60 pages to Gandhi and INC, but less than half a paragraph to Subhas Bose, it is hardly likely that it is making the case that Bose is more notable than Gandhi (critical of Gandhi though at times it might be). For that reason, I am not responding to Rueben lys's comments themselves, which, while well-intentioned, are increasingly off the point.
I think the issue of expanding the history section is separate one and needs to be discussed. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 21:58, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
- I believe the issue was "Is there anything else notable enough?" (My emphasis was on quit India and INA trials). My original edits was based largely on Kurke and Dortmunds book (re:weight) Fowler has quoted earlier. I have also provided (I believe) the cited and referenced evidence for notabillity from quite afew authors (On the basis what has been said by the authors) this I am not yet satisfied Fowler has done). I think my argument's pretty much done.Rueben lys 22:25, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
PS:I believe Sumanch (talk · contribs) edit was nearly the same as mine, and Vinay Jha (talk · contribs)'s also share my opinion.Rueben lys 22:33, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
- Please don't be disingenuous. user:Sumanch is silent on INA, INA trials, revolutionaries, terrorists, Subhas Bose, ... His/her edit is much more along the lines of how I would expand the article if I had to do it, and in keeping with the charts I have made above. As for user:Vinay Jha, he hasn't commented in the RfC, which means, he hasn't commented in this RfC. There are many people like user:Taxman (who wrote in the section above against expansion, and who I haven't counted in my vote), so please don't start nickel and diming this. I guarantee you I will take this to the Village Pump or other fora. I know that my list of secondary sources listed here, is unimpeachable overall and in keeping with all Misplaced Pages guidelines. I have been patient with you, giving you the clearly-written reasoned responses to your increasingly random and unfocused disquisitions, but please don't push your luck. OK? Fowler&fowler«Talk» 11:01, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Fowler, this is gonna sound stupid, but DONT'T CAPTIALISE TO IMPLY YOUR SHOUTING AND DONT TRY TO TALK DOWN OTHERS, its very RUDE. I have said before, I will say again, I have so far NOT (or tried my best not to) talk you down, nor ridiculed your arguments, quite unlike yourself. With regards to the comments, I took into account Vinay Jha's opinion, wether you like it or not is not my problem. User Sumanch made this edit which you reverted as PoV and later said it was unencyclopaedic and unreferenced, after the whole rv war started, and this was my version that you reverted. You REALLY would have expanded in those lines. Gosh!!! I must have been blind and stupid Professor. I did take into account for that reason. Wehter that's nickeling or diming or counting chickens I am not sure, If you feel that's stupid, say so, and stop acting like the world's out to get you. Stop acting like the head teacher here OK? You have managed to piss of half the other editors here with your endless rantings through the last few months. I have repeatedly tried to reach out and calm situations, YOU HAVE ONLY TRIED THE OPPOSITE. See what I wrote below before you start your statistical rantings again. BTW, Kulke and Dortmund's book doesn't have 5 pages on the INA trials, I have looked, and the program you're using is probably wrong.Rueben lys 12:32, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Huh? OK is written in capitals. It has nothing to do with shouting. Here is the OED (2004). "OK: All correct, all right; satisfactory, good; well, in good health or order. In early use, occas. more intensively: outstanding, excellent. Now freq. in somewhat weakened sense: adequate, acceptable. OK by (someone): fine by (a person), acceptable to (a person). Chiefly predicative." Fowler&fowler«Talk» 12:47, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Oh allright, sorry.Rueben lys 12:49, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Polling may bring this issue to an end. No other way to decide...I request all voters to go through the RfC themselves and decide whether the history section should be expanded.KnowledgeHegemony 09:56, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- The RfC is not about expansion (which I am not necessarily against), but rather whether topics like "Revolutionaries," "terrorists," "Bhagat Singh," "INA," "INA trials," or "Subhas Bose" belong to the History section either in its current state or in a slightly expanded state (in which, say four sentences are allowed instead of the current two). The RfC is also not about (as user:Rueben lys now seems to implying), whether there is "anything else notable enough?" Obviously, if you look at my charts here, the secondary sources I have used do think there are other issues that are notable; however, they are not the ones listed above, but rather, "Partition of India," "Government of India Act of 1935," "Non-cooperation movement," "Tilak," "Gokhale," "Nehru," "Jinnah," and "B. R. Ambedkar." Fowler&fowler«Talk» 10:32, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Can we clarify what the vote is for, since, as Fowler points out there might be confusion on what the issue is. Also, I have a feeling that voting would a destroy many good intentions and secondly make a concrete feature out of it. I am not, as many will notice, a regular editor in this page, and I can also see that Fowler has a point with regards to weight and coverage, even if I cant emphasise my point on notabillity. With regards to this article, I am sure we can reach a consensus version (as Sarvagnya had suggested earlier) on the basis of the comments and sources and opinions above. I will not contribute to this since as I said I do not contribute to this article regularly and my focus is more on Indian history. Is this acceptable?Rueben lys 12:22, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Probably the easiest one would be something like:
“ | The history of the Indian Independence movement be expanded from the current two to either four or six sentences and the edits be made in concert with the weight and coverage in the reliable sources; alternatively, it be kept at its current size, but the wording be improved. | ” |
- It is the "reliable sources" that is of importance for me. Finding a BBC article here, or a review article somewhere else, or quoting Nirad Chaudhury ruminating about something or the other don't constitute solid sources. I think Misplaced Pages has long gone beyond the point, especially in articles like the India page, especially in the history section of that page, when sources that are not the best peer-reviewed and internationally-known academic sources can cut it any more as citations. I think the two charts that I made above are a pretty good indication of what the coverage is in these sources. (There are a few errors in them, which I will soon correct.)
- I will agree with Fowler in this count, but just point out that the BBC history article is by Chandrika Kaul who's a lecturer of Modern at University of St Andrews. Nirad C. Chaudhuri rambles in the Journal Pacific affairs, which is a peer-reviewed Journal (re:reliable sources, and the earlier point of secondary sources) published by the University of British Columbia. The other opinions I have sourced from journals that are all peer-reviewed and well-recognised (and mentioned by name). In fact the journals I used as source have even reviewed the most (if not all) Books that Fowler has mentioned and has commented on wether these are suitable or not and what they are suitable for. I have provided a link to some of these earlier. I agree it should be made with due regards to weight and coverage, but will suggest that notabillity should be taken into account, otherwise the bias (or the claims of it) creeps in.Rueben lys 15:01, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Also, the more I think about it, the more I feel that the expansion, if it is to take place, should be done in this structured and localized (in time and space) fashion, rather than a carte blanche one by say 20%, which will be harder to manage. This way everyone would be focused on just one sub-sub-topic, i.e. the Indian Independence Movement. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 14:08, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- So what is the solution???KnowledgeHegemony 15:06, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
My last attempt
In your note above on "On Sources," you state that although my sources and statistics described here might imply coverage of the various topics, they don't imply notability. In your own words:
“ | What have the author said??? I have said what my references say, which allows the judgement of wether (sic) it satisfies notabillity (sic) or not. I dont (sic) see any of Fowler's sources saying anything. Of course, for the major part the stuff that find mention in the books that Fowler quotes . Nothing has been said on what the books say and because Fowler has convinced (impressively, I will say in appreciation) that others dont get coverage. | ” |
I deliberately didn't reply earlier, because I didn't want to get into endless conversations involving quotations from different sources. But since you implied later in that note that one of my sources, (Robb, Peter. (Professor of History of India, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London). 2004. A History of India (Palgrave Essential Histories), Palgrave Macmillan. 368 pages. ISBN 0333691296) had really nothing to say about the Indian independence movement, but rather about "Modern India," let me provide the extended quotes. I will stick to that one source, to prove my point. First, what did you say about this book? Here it is:
“ | ... (the review) which says there will be inevitable discomfort at the ommission (sic) of details and then says it is an excellent book on the Development of society, economics and pollitics (sic) in Modern India. It is an examination of Modern-Nation-state-style western democracy and Indian-traditional-religious dichotomy of modern India. I am not entirely sure why this would be a study of The Raj and the Indian independence movement. It seems more social history to me. (My italics) | ” |
Here, in collapsible box format, are extended excerpts from the review of the book from the Journal of Asian History:
Expand to view excerpts from the review of Robb's book in Journal of Asian History: | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
I repeat again the words of the review: "The focus of this book is on the modern period, and, thus, the details are reserved for that discussion.... it is an excellent introduction to modern Indian history." Modern Indian history, btw, includes the Indian independence movement. Here is a segment of the list of Robb's chapters:
- Chapter 5: Early Modern India II: Company Raj (This is about India during the rule of the East India Company (i.e. 1757-1858)
- Chapter 6: Modern India I: Modern Government (This is about Indian under the early years of Crown rule, i.e. from 1858 to 1885.)
- Chapter 7: Modern India II: Politics. This is about the freedom movement. Here is Robb in his own words at the beginning of Chapter 6:
“ | The remaining chapters of the book will analyse the emergence of modern India. It is a tale of empire and decolonization that is in many respects exemplary of its age. It is a saga of nation-building and emergent democracy. It is concerned with the growth of a modern economy, and of wealth and poverty. It is an account of transforming traditions and global flows of goods and ideas. It is one of the great stories of history.
But it cannot be told and understood as a single narrative. Therefore the following chapters divide it into many different overlapping aspects. The divisions are artificial and may seem somewhat unlike the ways in which topics are usually grouped. The argument is that they allow distinct elements of a very complex whole to be given their due weight. This sixth chapter will discuss the modern forms of government under colonialism, considering various policies to show how the state grew. Chapter seven will turn to Indian politics, tracing, in turn, anti-colonialism, religious nationalism and popular protest, eventually reaching the transfer of power. Chapter 8 will look at changes in society, including women's, low-class and religious movements ... |
” |
Does it become clear now? The "omission of details" that you highlight are about pre-Mughal India, about Buddhism and Jainism, not about the post-1757 events. The book spends two chapters on events either leading up to or events involving the Indian Freedom movement. That is a part of modern India.
What does Robb's book say about Gandhi, Indian National Congress, ... Here is collapsible box format are somem quotes, including some extended quotes from two pages (p. 184 and 185). I encourage Wikipedians to read them for a dispassionate account of Gandhi and the Indian independence movement from the perspective of an academic historian writing sixty years on. This, by the way, is no hagiographic account of Gandhi.
Expand to view excerpts about Gandhi and the Congress in Robb's book: |
---|
|
What does the book say about Subhas Bose? There is just one reference (half a sentence) in passing:
Expand to view the one sentence about Bose in Robb's book: |
---|
"Gandhi's Congress undoubtedly hastened the tardy concession of Indian independence, though not all of his leadership was wise or consistent, especially when it came to detailed negotiation. There was the major contribution too from the younger generation including Vallabhbhai Patel, Jawaharlal Nehru and Subhas Chandra Bose (the last ousted in the late 1930s after quarreling with Gandhi). The Congress was able to maintain a wide support-base, from businessmen who became more attracted the closer the party came to power, to peasant activists who used and were used by the Congress. Evidence of popularity came in the Congress victories in 1937 elections, not only in general constituencies, but in scheduled-caste (dalits') seats, except in Bombay, and even, where they contested them in many Muslim seats. The outcomes were clear Congress majorities in five of eleven provinces, with not far short of half the general seats, and a huge boost in recorded Congress membership, by nearly 50 per cent, to 4.5 million." |
In the entire chapter on the freedom movement, among all the hundreds of words and tens of pages devoted to Gandhi, the Indian National Congress, Muslim League, the Partition of India, Jinnah, Nehru, Patel, Tilak, Ambedkar, ... all it has is half a sentence about Bose's great role. Great it might have been, but it clearly wasn't notable enough to merit more than half a sentence (in passing) in the book. Both Nehru and Patel are mentioned many times in description of events leading up to independence (not just after independence), but Bose is absent. There is no mention of INA, INA trials. Are you still going to say that the organization, people, and events I consider important in India's independence movement: Indian Nation Congress, Gandhi, Muslim League, Partition of India, Jinnah, Tilak, Partition of Bengal (1905), Montague-Chelmsford reforms, the Rowlatt Act, Jallianwallah Bagh, Nehru, Patel, Ambedkar, Government of India Act of 1935, Non-cooperation, Satyagraha only get more coverage but are not considered notable by my sources? If my extended quotes don't imply notability for my list from the perspective of my sources, and also the half a sentence in passing about Bose (and none about INA or INA trials, Bombay mutiny) imply non-notability, I am not sure what more evidence I can provide. You have made some seemingly disingenuous remarks (which I grant may have resulted from a hurried reading) about the review of Robb's book, which is about as good a review any book gets in an academic journal these days. Robb, as Professor of History of India, School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London is one of the best-known South Asian historian around. I offer you seven other books, all written by well-known historians, and published by internationally known academic presses; I provide two signed long articles in Britannica and Encarta again written by Stanley Wolpert of UCLA and Phillip Luttgendorff of Columbia University, I provide six more advanced research monographs. (All with links that allow you to read the texts.) What do you provide in return? A BBC web article (which while written by an academic, is clearly not as reliable a source as a well-known text-book), and an article written by Nirad Chaudhury (no historian himself) from 1951, and all this while you insinuate that my sources don't necessarily think my topics are notable.
This is as far as I go. I am beginning to feel that you are trolling this page and you will leave me with no option but to go to other Misplaced Pages forums. This is not a threat, just a plain and sad statement of fact. I am confident that my sources are regarded as the best one gets these days, and will be regarded so by Misplaced Pages. I am also feel that your sources are not reliable, that you are fixated on a viewpoint and then go looking helter-skelter for sources that say anything in support of your viewpoint. The proper way to approach history is to first look at the sources and then arrive at a view point. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 22:25, 3 September 2007 (UTC)
- Why would I troll you? I have also provided above excerpt from Stanley Wolpert's Book I believe you quoted earlier, the opinions expressed in that with regards to the importance I believe is seminal. I have presented my point as to why I believe the earlier version was monolithic and why I believe there is grounds to hold the opinion that there were notable events that deserved mention on the grounds of what the effects of the events were. The Nonviolent movement went on from 1920s-1940s, twenty years, and achieved significant reforms, ofcourse it will find (and deserves) a proportionately greater coverage and analysis. That still doesn't solve the problem as to wether it was the only significant event or movement. As you said earlier, you would have expanded the article on the lines that Sumanch's lines if you had to. You also mentioned that Kulke and Dortmund was one of the books you found agree with your views. My edit was based on Kulke and Dortmunds mostly, and I included the INA trials of 1945 because of the notabillity factor and the consensus I have found so far amongst the sources I looked at that those events played a significant part. I have provided my opinion. I do not doubt for one second your sources are extremely good (and I have said before I appreciate that you have made a good point that most of the coverage is focussed on the Congres led movement). But as I have so far seen and shown, even some of the authors you cite also hold the opinion that the events around 1945 were important point in the conclusion of The Raj. I admit I may have wrongly interpreted the review you quote earlier. But at the same time, I have shown why I believe going by coverage alone risks excluding important and notable events. And Fowler, I dont understand, I have repeatedly said I am trying to work towards a collaboration and not a confrontation, both in your talk page as well as here, the latest being earlier today. Do you really find me trolling, or are you just assuming bad faith and not accepting that I may have a point. You're welcome by all means to take this to any forum if you wish to, and I am sure they will accept that your sources are extremely good. Wether the opinions expressed in your sources agree with the opinion you hold is a different issue. I have said earlier that I appreciate that you are a regular editor to this page while I am not, and hence I suggested working towards a consensus version earlier today. I have also showed why I believe there are notable events excluded from the history section. Rueben lys 01:00, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
The frustrating thing for me in any conversation (with you) is that you don't stick to one point. I said upstairs, let's stick to the one book, whose review you had apparently mis-read, and whose scope you had apparently also wrongly inferred – the book of Peter Robb. Now I find that you have moved to two other books. One is a book of Kulke and Dortmund and ther other is not any book on my list (but a slightly different book by Stanley Wolpert). The funny thing is that I have four books of Wolpert sitting on my desk: India (which you are now quoting from), A New History of India, (which I had listed), and two others, Jinnah of Pakistan and his latest Shameful Flight: The Last Years of the British Empire in India. And, in addition, I have the long section on modern Indian history from the Britannica written by Wolpert. I have read all the books, and sadly from your flip-flops, it seems that you haven't read any. A week ago you hadn't even heard of Wolpert. A little later you were deriding him because he apparently called the Indian Air Force the Royal Air Force etc etc. Now he suddenly seems to have become the poster child of your point of view.
It's one thing to disagree with me, but it is another altogether to accuse me of not interpreting my sources correctly, especially when I have read the sources and you haven't. I don't know if you are trolling, or deluded, but the bottom line for me is that in any six-sentence history of the Indian Freedom Struggle (and I don't see the history going beyond that in the India page), there is no room for Bose or the INA. I am happy to collaborate with you, but I cannot be party to distortions of history. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 03:23, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
Next step ?
Guys, guys guys (or gals as the case might :-) ),
You both have put in an exemplary amount of work to put forward your respective cases - lets not spoil it now by getting into accusations about bad faith and recriminations about past actions.
I have gone through most of the evidence that both of you have brought forth - and I am not clear on what point you both agree on now (i.e. after looking through the whole of the above discussion), and what are the remaining points of disagreement. If I am interpreting your statements correctly, both of you are open to adding a couple of sentences to expand the current discussion of the independence movement. If so, could you propose what you think the new discussion should look ? I think that will serve as a good starting point, for all of us to jump in and work on the specific revisions to the article. Cheers. Abecedare 04:34, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
- Well, as I stated above, I am not against a 20% expansion of the history section (including an expansion of the Indian independence movement sub-section from two sentences to four, or perhaps, even, six), but I feel that the expansion should be consonant with perspectives of the available reliable sources. With regards the years 1885 to 1947, I think that the two charts I made here are a pretty good indication of what the reliable sources consider to be notable. (The one mistake I made in the charts is that Gandhi's contribution came out exaggerated relative to the Indian National Congress. After I make the correction, the Indian National Congress and Gandhi will swap places. Sorry, to reduce this to a "statistical analysis," but there is really no other way to do it; parsing the meanings of sentences results in a lexical journey of no arrival and no return.) My list of what were the notable contributions (based on reliable sources) would likely come out in this order:
- Indian National Congress, Gandhi, Partition of India, Muslim League, Jinnah, Nehru, Non-cooperation movement, Government of India Act of 1935, Civil disobedience/Non violence, Tilak, Partition of Bengal (1905), Swadeshi, Montagu-Chelmsford reforms (1919), Patel, Gokhale, B. R. Ambedkar, Early leaders as a group (Dadabhai Naoroji, Annie Besant, Surendranath Banerjee, and Lala Lajpat Rai), Terrorists/Revolutionaries (especially in relation to the Partition of Bengal), Quit India movement, Subhas Bose, Abul Kalam Azad, C. Rajagopalachari, Indian National Army, ...
- I think it is important that the four or six sentences be about causes, effects, and events, not about creating a laundry list, especially of names of people. So a statement like: "In the last decade of the freedom struggle, contributions were made by A, B, C, D and E" is not what we want. (My disagreement with Rueben lys (talk · contribs) is mainly about the weight assigned to certain events and people. I feel that after making a good case that the freedom struggle section should be expanded and appear less monolithic in its depiction, he ultimately reduces it to the years 1942 to 46, and, there too, assigns undue weight to the Quit India movement, INA, Bose, INA trials and the Bombay Sailors mutiny, and no weight to World War II and its aftermath, Cripps mission, the change to a Labour government in Britain, the Congress interim government, Bengal famine, Jinnah's increasing prominence, Direct action day and its aftermath.) It is important to remember that the history section is not about the contribution of Indians in the "Indian Freedom movement," but rather about the causes, effects, events, organizations and people (not just Indian) that created an independent India.
- If people want to vote on something, here is a possible statement:
“ | The history of the Indian independence movement be expanded from its current size of two sentences to either four or six and the edits be made in concert with the weight and coverage in the reliable sources; alternatively, it be kept at its current size, but the wording be improved. | ” |
- So people would vote on:
- No change, but improvement.
- Increase from two to four sentences.
- Increase from two to six sentences.
- I don't think having more than six sentences will be productive. The issue of further expansion could be revisited, say, a year from now, but the current expansion needs to be controlled. I feel the other sub-sections of the history section could be expanded in a similar fashion by setting a sentence limit and focusing all our attention on just that sub-section. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 09:51, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
- I feel the History section is currently quite safe in its structure and content. Including event 'A' will further lead to inclusion of 'B' and then CDEF..so on and we will lose out on WP:SS. Would rather prefer expanding Politics or Geography. Sorry Rueben_Iys (I salute your efforts) but thats what I conclude after logical and straightforward thinking. My judgement and assessment may be challenged.:| KnowledgeHegemony 15:20, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
- KH, I will accept your suggestion with the addition that a commitment be made to reevaluate the content of the section with an open mind sometime in the future, or as and when new opinions are expressed (put a hidden line in the text to have this discussed in this talk page if you will). I have had to make an effort to put forth my point (hats off to Fowler for his). The last thing I will say (dont reply to this, this is just to point out), all my sources includin one of Fowler's own cited auhority (Wolpert, and this is the reason I put it there after I derided him for getting his facts wrong) notes the INA trials have influenced a seminal shift in the British policy (Sarkar put this as "decisive shift in British policy", Wolpert said "Raj was doomed" a Cohen said "Rallying point", a lot of other historians said a lot of other things) and this was well outside the congress led nonviolent campaign. That's all I will say. I am not going to argue against the allegations that I am trying to distort history, because if all the arguments above have been lost, so will any subsequent arguments as well. The last thing is, it would be wrong to assume anybody on the history of their edits and contributions, including well recognised contributors, because it seems to me there is a PoV pushing (possibly with noble intentions, possibly not).I am going to get a life for a while.
The last thing is I(and others I note) have faced a real problem with attitude, bad comments, bad faith, threats, attempts to patronise, ownership issues etc etc here. It is enough to scare of any new editor.I will request everyone else to make sure this is held in check because that reinforces the idea that theres not just PoV pushing, but with bad intentions.Rueben lys 19:53, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
Medical tourism
While I have great sympathy for the constant re-writing of the history/political sections of this article, please stop excising comments relating to other areas of India and Indian activities when anyone is reverting to an earlier version. For example, Medical Tourism is becoming increasingly important to the Indian economy, and in my view merits a small comment - it is really irritiating when such additions disappear because someone reverts to an earlier version because they have a particular interest in a completely different section of the article. If you want to revert, please just revert the bit you are interested in.
Thank you very much
Professorial 00:43, 5 September 2007 (UTC)Professorial
- Professorial, welcome to wikipedia and this page! Medical tourism may be an important enough point, to mention in Economy of India and possibly here, but we should be careful that we do not give it undue weight (relative to its importance in the overall economy), highlight projected statistics or phrase it non-neutrally (example, pronouncing it to be a good idea). Also, we should ideally aim to source it using a unimpeachable source such as an academic or official study on the issue rather than a news report (I emphasize that this is an ideal, and not a requirement for wikipedia or this page). For these reasons I have tentatively reverted your recent addition, but encourage you to work with other editors here to arrive at a suitable version for inclusion on this, and other related, pages. Cheers. Abecedare 01:00, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
- Please see this revision and feel free to suggest changes. It may be also worthwhile to create a new article Medical tourism in India to discuss this concept (pros and cons) in detail. Abecedare 01:13, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
Ridiculous. Really.
User:Fowler's nauseating habit of filling pages is really getting out of hand. I shall be reverting wholesale any more dumping of nonsense on this page. The talk page has become absolutely unreadable and in edit mode it gets worse! For one, all his arguments are fallacious and involve setting up straw men and the like. For example, when someone talks of Subhash Bose, he bundles Bhagat Singh(who is clearly not in the same league) into his rebuttal. Also, the very premise on which his arguments hinge is flawed. Reliable sources are "reliable" for what they say; not for what they dont say. Yes, there may be exceptions, but trying to prove something by pointing out that an author doesnt talk about it is ridiculous and downright dishonest.
The Indian independence movement is a landmark issue in world history and politics and thousands and thousands of authors from around the world have written tens of thousands of books on it. It doesnt matter whether you pick one dozen or two dozen works from these tens of thousands to prove your point, it still is just 'cherry picking'. Also, 'calculating' relative notabilities based on 'word count'(literally!) is just stupid. The stupidity is patent when Fowler comes up with BS like Montague-Chelmsford reforms ahead of the Quit India movement and Bose and even Ambedkar, for that matter. Even the most mainstream of authors have a worldview/POV and they are free to indulge in it in the books they write. WP:NPOV and WP:UNDUE afterall, dont govern their writings. So, inferring what we want from what they didnt write is plain and simple B.S.
As far as the issue is concerned, this is my take - INA may not be in the same notability league as Gandhi or the INC but that doesnt mean that Bose is a fringe figure! Bose was part of the INC too. A very senior (twice president!) leader at that. Not just senior, very influential too(considering that he beat the Mahatma Himself!). Also as far as the radical face of the movement was concerned, Bose/INA were clearly head and shoulders above the rest. Bose thus is a unique figure in the independence movement. He was a part(an extremely important part at that) of both faces of the independence movement. I cant think of anybody else who could compete for such a distinction. And obviously, if the government deems it necessary to honour somebody with the highest civilian award of the land(that they had to withdraw it on technical grounds is a seperate matter), that 'somebody' has got to be notable! Very notable. Bose(if not INA) getting a mention in the section ought to be a no brainer! Nehru, Patel and others can be squeezed in via an appropriate pipelink - say, ] or something like that. Innovative use of pipelinks can help us squeeze in lot of other organisations and leaders too. Only if we even tried!
Also, everyone here seems to agree that the independence movement was not just one-dimensional/Gandhi/ahimsa thing. If we are going to also mention the radical face of the movement, I dont see how we'd do that without Bose and/or INA getting a mention. For now, I reject all of Fowler's filibustering as nonsense. Can somebody tell me why I shouldnt delete all his nonsense as rank abuse of a talk page? Sarvagnya 02:45, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
- Sarvagnya, article talk pages are meant for discussion of proposed changes to article content, and the way F&f and Rueben have done so with references is worthy of emulation rather than derision. Yes, I agree that the above discussion (as all others!) would have benefited with greater assumption of good faith, and less commentary on editor conduct (as opposed to article content), but overall I think the accumulation of references was very useful for this immediate debate as well as for future reference. Of course, you, I and all others are welcome to add our own reliable sources to the mix, but deleting productive discussion wouldn't be advisable IMO. Regards. Abecedare 03:29, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
- 'Discussing' something is not the same as defecating all over the talk page. Can you imagine somebody walking in now and trying to make sense of what is going on? This was supposed to be a RfC and one can hardly make any sense of what people are saying! Its hard to even make out where a comment starts and where it ends! This type of 'discussing' has the potential to put off and drive away well meaning and knowledgeable editors. If you have references, just wrap them in a <ref> tag and be done. If its on google books or somewhere, provide a link. People are savvy enough to click on a link when they see one. Quoting passage after passage verbatim from book after book is perhaps even a vio of copyright. This is NOT 'discussion'.. this is abuse. And like Rueben points out, he tops off all this with apalling doses of bad faith and snobbery. Sarvagnya 03:47, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
- Misplaced Pages featured articles
- Featured articles that have appeared on the main page
- Featured articles that have appeared on the main page once
- All unassessed articles
- FA-Class India articles
- Top-importance India articles
- FA-Class India articles of Top-importance
- India portal selected articles
- WikiProject India articles