Odisha State Open University, Sambalpur. Odisha, India.
World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2026, 29(01), 092-095
Article DOI: 10.30574/wjarr.2026.29.1.4301
Received on 24November 2025; revised on 29 December 2025; accepted on 31 December 2025
Colonial Indian historiography has largely privileged organized nationalist movements and elite political leadership, relying heavily on official colonial archives. This paper challenges such archive-centric narratives by examining everyday forms of resistance practiced by rural communities in India between 1880 and 1947. It argues that political opposition to colonial authority frequently occurred outside formal organizations and written documentation.
Using a qualitative historical approach, the study interprets district-level records, vernacular traditions, folk practices, and administrative silences to reconstruct informal political behavior. Practices such as selective tax compliance, agricultural non-cooperation, ritual modification, and control of information are analyzed as deliberate political actions. The paper demonstrates that everyday resistance constituted a sustained challenge to colonial power and calls for a broader conceptualization of political agency in colonial contexts.
Colonial; Aauthority; Contexts; Snalyzed; Tradition
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Bijaya Pradhan. Everyday resistance beyond archives: Informal political practices in colonial rural India (1880–1947).World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 2026, 29(01), 092-095. Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2026.29.1.4301.
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