
Contents
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An Intensifying Imperial Aesthetic An Intensifying Imperial Aesthetic
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“The Proper Union of All Their Parts”: India Goods and Imperial Revenues “The Proper Union of All Their Parts”: India Goods and Imperial Revenues
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“Tyrants Clothed with Civil Authority” “Tyrants Clothed with Civil Authority”
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The India Trade and the “Bull-Work” of the Empire The India Trade and the “Bull-Work” of the Empire
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4 A Company to Fear: India and the American Revolution
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Published:February 2016
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Abstract
The Seven Years’ War and British conquest in Bengal furthered major constitutional questions about the similarities and differences of British rule in India and America, and reinvigorated plans for greater metropolitan control over imperial trade and administration. The Calico Acts and the ensuing regulation had long before created a system and precedent of colonial consumption to support the East India Company. The coincident timing of the news of a famine in Company-governed Bengal with the passage of the Tea Act granting the Company the ability to dump tea on American markets created deep concern in the colonies. Patriots saw the American Revolution as necessary to avoid a similar fate to Bengalis who suffered not just hypothetically, but physically under the monopolies and government of the Company and its servants.
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