Indian Journalism and Nationalist Consciousness
Tilak's Kesari, Vernacular Press Act, Gandhi's Young India, sedition law, press freedom legacy.
Indian Journalism and Nationalist Consciousness
The Press & the Nationalist Movement
What you'll learn
- How the Indian press helped build nationalist consciousness.
- Key newspapers and their editors who challenged British rule.
- Vernacular Press Act (1878) — how the British tried to suppress Indian journalism.
- Role of press in spreading news of famines, massacres, and political ideas.
Key concepts
Press in colonial India — background
- First Indian newspaper: Bengal Gazette (Hicky's Gazette, 1780) — James Augustus Hicky; criticised Company officials; shut down by EIC within 2 years.
- Early 19th century: English-language press for Europeans; little Indian voice.
- Ram Mohan Roy launched Sambad Kaumudi (Bengali, 1821) and Mirat-ul-Akhbar (Persian, 1822) — argued for press freedom, social reform.
Press as a weapon of nationalism
The Indian press became the main vehicle for anti-colonial thought:
| Newspaper | Language | Founded | Editor/Owner | Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kesari | Marathi | 1881 | Bal Gangadhar Tilak | Aggressive nationalism; called for Swaraj; mobilised masses |
| Mahratta | English | 1881 | Bal Gangadhar Tilak | English-language nationalist views for educated audience |
| Amrita Bazar Patrika | Bengali/English | 1868 | Sisir Kumar Ghosh | Shifted to English overnight when Vernacular Press Act passed to escape the law |
| The Hindu | English | 1878 | Founded in Madras | Moderate nationalism; remains major paper today |
| Gadar | Punjabi/Urdu | 1913 | Lala Har Dayal (San Francisco) | Revolutionary nationalist paper for Indian diaspora; called for armed uprising |
| Young India | English | 1919 | Mahatma Gandhi | Gandhi's political platform; articulated non-violence, Swaraj |
| Navjivan | Gujarati | 1919 | Mahatma Gandhi | Reached rural Gujarati audience; mass nationalism |
| Harijan | English/Hindi | 1933 | Gandhi | Focused on untouchability and Dalit rights |
| Yugantar | Bengali | 1906 | Revolutionary nationalists | Argued for armed resistance; Bhagavad Gita as inspiration |
The Vernacular Press Act (1878)
- Passed by Viceroy Lord Lytton during the Second Anglo-Afghan War.
- Allowed magistrates to seize printing presses of Indian-language newspapers that "excited feelings of disaffection."
- Targeted Bengali, Marathi, Urdu press — not English press (used by Britons).
- Amrita Bazar Patrika converted to English overnight to escape the law — brilliant workaround.
- Repealed in 1882 by Lord Ripon (liberal viceroy).
- Revived effectively through Sedition law (Section 124A, IPC, 1870): Tilak tried and convicted twice (1897, 1908) for articles in Kesari deemed seditious.
Press and the 1857 Revolt
- Indian press in 1857 was very small; British press reported the revolt in racist terms ("Mutiny", "savage sepoys").
- Savarkar later reframed it as "First War of Independence" (1909 book) — this reinterpretation spread through nationalist press.
Tilak and Kesari
- Tilak used Kesari to:
- Report and inflame public anger over the Plague Commissioner Rand's shooting (1897) — Tilak charged with sedition.
- Report the Partition of Bengal (1905) and call for Swadeshi.
- Argue that Swaraj is "my birthright and I shall have it."
- 1908: Tilak sentenced to 6 years imprisonment in Mandalay (Burma) for Kesari articles defending the Alipore bombers.
- His arrest caused protests across India — showed that suppressing the press backfired.
Gandhi's use of the press
- Gandhi used Young India and Navjivan not just to report news but to educate morally — readers sent him letters; he replied publicly.
- Introduced the practice of satyagraha announcements through press — building public non-violent campaigns.
- British government deported journalists; confiscated presses; issued security bonds.
Press freedom — British restrictions
| Measure | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Vernacular Press Act | 1878 | Suppress Indian-language journalism |
| Section 124A (Sedition) | 1870 | Prosecute editors for anti-British content |
| Defence of India Act | 1915 | Censor press during WW1 |
| Rowlatt Act | 1919 | Extend wartime censorship to peacetime — sparked Non-Cooperation Movement |
Legacy
- Indian press created a national reading public — people in Pune read about events in Calcutta; common grievances became shared.
- Vernacular press gave regional languages political prestige.
- After independence: Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution guarantees freedom of speech and press.
- Press Trust of India (PTI) established 1949 as national news agency.
Quick check
- What was the Vernacular Press Act (1878)? Which paper cleverly escaped it?
- Name three nationalist newspapers and their editors.
- How did Tilak use Kesari to build nationalist sentiment?
- What is Section 124A (sedition law)? Who was prosecuted under it?
- How did Gandhi use Young India differently from typical newspapers?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Press & Nationalism.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Quick check
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