Amin's historiography of Chauri Chaura is a beautifully written, short and easy to read wonder. Amin captures the local sights and sounds of Chauri Chaura, with deft use of oral history, and by retaining the original words of those he interviewed. The local Bhojpuri dialect drips from the pages and lends colour to what would be a monochrome, black and white, story without it.
Amin examines the trial records of the Chauri Chaura 'riot', and his wonderful research reveals excellent usage of trial transcripts, and the memoirs of the High Court judges who commuted the 172 death sentences passed at the Sessions Court to 19. His examination of the role of violence in the nationalist movement, alongside the role of Gandhi is sublime. He reveals how the structures of Gandhi-raj and swaraj (self-rule) were interpreted at a local level, thus imbuing the people of Chauri Chaura with agency and a degree of clarity that was heretofore lacking.
His collation of the stories of those who lost family members in the aftermath of the colonial forces' backlash in response to the burning of Chauri Chaura, alongside his interviews regarding the "approver" (defence turned prosecution witness) are simply brilliant. These stories contradict the State account, and highlight the differences between how people viewed the picketing of Chaura bazaar. It is no small feat to produce to these stories, whilst laying them aside other sources, and allowing the stories to lose and strengthen facticity as they unravel across the pages.
This is a brilliant book for anyone interested in the events of Chauri Chaura in February 1922, and also an integral read for those who wish to hear the voices of those most affected, away from the pan-nationalist narratives that have been superimposed upon Chauri Chaura, since the days Gandhi expressed his condemnation, and turned an event that challenged power (a political act), into a 'riot' (a merely criminal act).