Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Charles Allen, author of Ashoka, no more

- Dhamini Ratnam letters@hindustant­imes.com

nNEWDELHI: “I’m very conscious that I’m a writer of history, not a historian,” Charles Allen once said at a literary festival in India in 2015, while talking about his book

Ashoka – the Search for India’s Lost Emperor, which had released in 2012. The work was well-received, and Allen travelled with it, speaking at panels, including the Jaipur Literary Festival.

Allen’s books achieved a good deal of success, not only because they were written skillfully — reviewers across the world spoke highly of his ability to tell a story well — but also because they made history, and particular­ly history of the British in India, more accessible to readers.

Long-time associate Toby Sinclair, who worked with Allen on the documentar­y

Bones of The Buddha in 2013, which was broadcast by National Geographic Channel said, “Charles talked about the many layers of Indian history and he walked the land he wrote about. Without giving too much prominence to the European rulers, Allen focused on the men or women in the field who studied India, be they local historians or British or European academics, interlinki­ng different bits of informatio­n across a wide area of research. It was well written accessible history backed up by rigorous research.” Nowhere was this more prominent than in the books on Buddha that Allen wrote. In 2002, The Buddha and the Sahibs, Allen wrote of James Princep, an assay master in the Calcutta Mint who helped decrypt the Brahmi Script of the third century BC, and of the legwork of members of the Asiatic Society who studied Ashoka’s edicts inscribed on slabs across the subcontine­nt. In The Buddha and Dr Fuhrer: An Archeologi­cal Scandal, which was published in 2008, Anton Fuhrer, an unscrupulo­us archaeolog­ist who trafficked in forged Buddhist relics, is part of the very title of the book. As a review of the 2012 book on Ashoka in the Guardian read, Allen was adept at putting back together such a vast academic jigsaw for the reader’s benefit. Allen has been critiqued for not adequately acknowledg­ing the study of the subcontine­nt’s natural and political history during the British rule as an exercise of colonial aggrandize­ment — an exercise that was brought into sharp focus with critical theorist Edward Said’s seminal work, Orientalis­m.

Yet, Allen was not a stranger to these criticisms. After all, in the same 2015 literary festival alluded to above, he went on to say, “We use that word history — we bandy it about too seriously. History is a minefield. It has always been used as propaganda. We have to look at it with an open mind.”

Allen was born in Kanpur in 1940, and authored several books. He passed away at his home in England on August 16.

 ??  ?? Charles Allen n
Charles Allen n

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India