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Boxwallah

Boxwallah is a term with at least two vastly contrasting meanings: one denoting a street peddler in British India and the other denoting an elite corporate executive, chiefly in the city of Calcutta (now Kolkata), in early postcolonial India.

Boxwallah as a street peddler Edit

The Collins English Dictionary defines a boxwallah as a derogatory term referring to "an itinerant pedlar or salesman in India".[1] In various 19th and early 20th century writings, the term was used in this sense.[2][3][4] An edition of Hobson-Jobson from this period similarly defined a boxwallah as "a native itinerant peddler" who "sells cutlery, cheap nick-nacks, and small wares of all kinds, chiefly European",[5] as did another dictionary of slang.[6] The word was a combination of "box" and "wallah".[5] According to author Ronald Vivian Smith, such boxwallahs started disappearing from the late 1940s onwards.[7]

Boxwallah as an elite corporate executive Edit

 
In postcolonial India, V. S. Naipaul vividly described the "box-wallah culture of Calcutta". Naipaul's imagery cited the Dalhousie business district (pictured) and British companies like Imperial Tobacco and Metal Box.[8]

The term boxwallah assumed a vastly different meaning in postcolonial India. The term became associated with anglicised Indian professionals working in elite British mercantile firms in Calcutta. Notably, V. S. Naipaul described boxwallahs as a "select and envied group"[9] and part of "the new Indian elite",[8] and observed: "The box-wallah culture of Calcutta is of a peculiar richness... This culture, though of Calcutta, is not necessarily Bengali. ...No one who works for the Marwaris can therefore properly be considered a box-wallah—your true box-wallah works only for the best British firms."[8] Naipaul further observed: "The Calcutta box-wallah comes of a good family, ICS, Army or big business; he might even have princely connections. He has been educated at an Indian or English public school and at one of the two English universities, whose accent, through all the encircling hazards of Indian intonation, he rigidly maintains."[8] Naipaul mentioned film personality Chidananda Dasgupta, who had worked with Imperial Tobacco in Calcutta, as someone who was a boxwallah.[9] Similarly, the autobiography of Raj Chatterjee, also a former executive at Imperial Tobacco in Calcutta, is titled The Boxwallah and the Middleman.[10] Similarly, corporate executive R. Gopalakrishnan has used the expression while referring to old British companies in Calcutta, such as Andrew Yule, Balmer Lawrie and Martin Burn: "names that have now virtually vanished."[11] Other authors to use the term boxwallah in the second sense include Amit Chaudhuri[12] and Pavan Verma.[13] However, even though referring to elite corporate professionals, the use of the term boxwallah was still considered somewhat derogatory, owing to its original colonial association with street peddlers.[14][15]

 
The advent of the Indian Institutes of Management are thought to have led to elite boxwallah executives from liberal arts backgrounds becoming redundant.

With the liberalisation of the Indian economy, the term "boxwallah" has become less common with changes in management culture. In the 1980s, Arabinda Ray, then executive director of General Electric in India spoke of the need for industry to "transition from the image of a 'boxwallah'... to the modern professional manager", advocating the hiring of talent from the Indian Institutes of Management and the Indian Institutes of Technology.[16] Chatterjee, in a chapter his autobiography titled "Requiem for a Boxwallah" describes how executives like him were eventually succeeded by "Brash young men with degrees in business administration who thought that our ideas were outdated, our pace too slow."[10] Anup Sinha, former professor at the Indian Institute of Management Calcutta, has explained the shift as follows: "The British colonial model of running businesses was on the way out as were the companies themselves. The age of the box-wallah' was over and the managerial characteristics of having a liberal arts education with a good family background and communication skills became redundant. There was a shift of focus in managerial skills towards production and operations and away from sales and marketing. The old British model was found wanting, and India turned to the US model with its emphasis on technical competence and rigorous training in the science of management."[17]

Boxwallah English Edit

In 1845, an article in The New Monthly Magazine and Humorist referred to the grammatically incorrect dialect of English spoken by boxwallahs (peddlers) in Calcutta. The article stated: "Every one of these superlative pedlars declares he is 'mem's own boxwallah', and each protests that he 'money not want – mem say her own price'."[18] In 1891, the linguist Hugo Schuchardt identified Boxwallah English as one of five types of pidgin English spoken in India, association the dialect with street peddlers in "Upper India".[19] In postcolonial India, Braj Bihari Kachru similarly identified Boxwallah English as a distinct form of English. Some examples of expressions in Boxwallah English given by Kachru are "I come go", "This good, fresh ten rupee", "He thief me" and "price good".[20]

In contrast, certain elite English accents appear to have been equated with that spoken by elite postcolonial boxwallahs. For example, Stephen Fry has described the film director Robin Hardy as possessing "a rather box-wallah version of an upper-class accent."[21] In his novel A Fine Family, Gurcharan Das has said of a character: "A. N. Rao , Neena's father , was a boxwallah , and one of the first Indian directors of a British company based in Bombay . He sported an ascot and a tweed jacket; he was the sort of person who spoke Hindustani with an Oxford accent."[22]

Boxwallah in literature Edit

 
Rudyard Kipling

Rudyard Kipling was particularly attracted by the idea of a boxwallah and the idea of a boxwallah is present in several of his short stories. In "From Sea to Sea", Kipling talks of a mistreated Burmese girl as if she were a Delhi Boxwallah, presumably because the protagonist bargained too hard with her.[non-primary source needed] In "The Sending of Dana Da", the title character makes a deathbed reference to his former life as a boxwallah.[non-primary source needed] Evelyn Waugh also mentions a 'wallah' at the end of his short story, "Incident in Azania."[23]

Boxwallah in cinema Edit

Satyajit Ray's film Seemabaddha ("Company limited") is regarded as a portrayal of a boxwallah in the elite, postcolonial sense of the term, i.e. a westernised corporate executive in Calcutta.[24][25][26] The protagonist in the film (played by Barun Chanda) works with a fictitious British fan manufacturing company called Hindusthan Peters.[27] Ray himself described the film as "a definitive film about the boxwallahs".[28]

In Anik Dutta's 2019 film Bhobishyoter Bhoot, one of the characters in the film (also played by Chanda) is a corporate executive from early postcolonial Calcutta, referred to as a boxwallah in the film.

The Boxwallah is also the title of an ITV Playhouse TV film that aired on 31 July 1982 and starred Leo McKern and Rachel Kempson.[29]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Boxwallah definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary". collinsdictionary.com. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  2. ^ Belgravia. Willmer & Rogers. 1876.
  3. ^ Katherine, Sister (1900). Towards the Land of the Rising Sun: Or Four Years in Burma. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.
  4. ^ Macdonald, Frederika (1887). Puck and Pearl, the wanderings and wonderings of two English children in India. Chapman and Hall Limited.
  5. ^ a b Yule, Sir Henry; Burnell, Arthur Coke (1996). Hobson-Jobson: The Anglo-Indian Dictionary. Wordsworth Editions. ISBN 978-1-85326-363-7.
  6. ^ Barrère, Albert; Leland, Charles Godfrey (1889). A Dictionary of Slang, Jargon & Cant: Embracing English, American, and Anglo-Indian Slang, Pidgin English, Tinker's Jargon and Other Irregular Phraseology. Ballantyne Press.
  7. ^ Smith, Ronald Vivian (2008). Capital Vignettes: A Peep into Delhi's Ethos. Rupa & Company. ISBN 978-81-291-1317-7.
  8. ^ a b c d Naipaul, V. S. (1 September 2002). "The Writer and the World". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  9. ^ a b Naipaul, V. S. (17 November 2016). The Indian Trilogy. Pan Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-5098-5238-3.
  10. ^ a b Chatterjee, Raj (2008). The Boxwallah and the Middleman. Penguin Books India. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-14-306316-2.
  11. ^ Gopalakrishnan, R. (27 September 2016). When the Penny Drops: Learning What's Not Taught. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-81-8475-398-1.
  12. ^ Chaudhuri, Amit (14 February 2013). Calcutta: Two Years in the City. Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-908526-31-1.
  13. ^ Varma, Pavan K. (2005). Being Indian: The Truth about why the Twenty-first Century Will be India's. Penguin Books India. ISBN 978-0-14-303342-4.
  14. ^ Masani, Zareer (1988). Indian Tales of the Raj. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07127-8.
  15. ^ Jones, Stephanie (18 June 1992). Merchants of the Raj: British Managing Agency Houses in Calcutta Yesterday and Today. Springer. ISBN 978-1-349-12538-8.
  16. ^ Ray, Arabinda (October 1984). "After the First Generation". Decision. Calcutta. 11 (4). ProQuest 1297775104.
  17. ^ Sinha, Anup (2017). "From Management Institutes to Business Schools: An Indian Journey". Management Education in India. pp. 43–53. doi:10.1007/978-981-10-1696-7_3. ISBN 978-981-10-1695-0.
  18. ^ The New Monthly Magazine and Humorist. Chapman and Hall. 1843.
  19. ^ Schuchardt, Hugo (1980). "Indo-English (1891)". Pidgin and Creole Languages: Selected Essays by Hugo Schuchardt. Cambridge University Press. pp. 38–64. ISBN 978-0-521-22789-6.
  20. ^ Kachru, Braj B. (1 February 2005). Asian Englishes: Beyond the Canon. Hong Kong University Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-962-209-665-3.
  21. ^ Fry, Stephen (2014). More Fool Me. Penguin Books Limited. ISBN 978-0-7181-7755-3.[page needed]
  22. ^ Das, Gurcharan (1990). A Fine Family. Penguin Books India. p. 175. ISBN 978-0-14-012258-9.
  23. ^ The Complete Stories, Evelyn Waugh, Hachette Book Group, 2011[page needed]
  24. ^ Sanyal, Devapriya (10 December 2021). Gendered Modernity and Indian Cinema: The Women in Satyajit Ray's Films. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-50919-9.
  25. ^ Simpson, Paul (26 May 2011). Movie Lists: 397 Ways to Pick a DVD. Profile Books. ISBN 978-1-84765-355-0.
  26. ^ Pioneer, The. "A few snapshots from Calcutta. Circa 1960". The Pioneer. India. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  27. ^ Sanyal, Devapriya. "Camera and action: The Soumendu Roy-Satyajit Ray teamwork that produced some of our greatest films". Scroll.in. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  28. ^ Robinson, Andrew (23 September 2021). Satyajit Ray: The Inner Eye: The Biography of a Master Film-Maker. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-350-25852-5.
  29. ^ ITV Playhouse: The Boxwallah 1982 at IMDb

boxwallah, term, with, least, vastly, contrasting, meanings, denoting, street, peddler, british, india, other, denoting, elite, corporate, executive, chiefly, city, calcutta, kolkata, early, postcolonial, india, contents, street, peddler, elite, corporate, exe. Boxwallah is a term with at least two vastly contrasting meanings one denoting a street peddler in British India and the other denoting an elite corporate executive chiefly in the city of Calcutta now Kolkata in early postcolonial India Contents 1 Boxwallah as a street peddler 2 Boxwallah as an elite corporate executive 3 Boxwallah English 4 Boxwallah in literature 5 Boxwallah in cinema 6 ReferencesBoxwallah as a street peddler EditThe Collins English Dictionary defines a boxwallah as a derogatory term referring to an itinerant pedlar or salesman in India 1 In various 19th and early 20th century writings the term was used in this sense 2 3 4 An edition of Hobson Jobson from this period similarly defined a boxwallah as a native itinerant peddler who sells cutlery cheap nick nacks and small wares of all kinds chiefly European 5 as did another dictionary of slang 6 The word was a combination of box and wallah 5 According to author Ronald Vivian Smith such boxwallahs started disappearing from the late 1940s onwards 7 Boxwallah as an elite corporate executive Edit In postcolonial India V S Naipaul vividly described the box wallah culture of Calcutta Naipaul s imagery cited the Dalhousie business district pictured and British companies like Imperial Tobacco and Metal Box 8 The term boxwallah assumed a vastly different meaning in postcolonial India The term became associated with anglicised Indian professionals working in elite British mercantile firms in Calcutta Notably V S Naipaul described boxwallahs as a select and envied group 9 and part of the new Indian elite 8 and observed The box wallah culture of Calcutta is of a peculiar richness This culture though of Calcutta is not necessarily Bengali No one who works for the Marwaris can therefore properly be considered a box wallah your true box wallah works only for the best British firms 8 Naipaul further observed The Calcutta box wallah comes of a good family ICS Army or big business he might even have princely connections He has been educated at an Indian or English public school and at one of the two English universities whose accent through all the encircling hazards of Indian intonation he rigidly maintains 8 Naipaul mentioned film personality Chidananda Dasgupta who had worked with Imperial Tobacco in Calcutta as someone who was a boxwallah 9 Similarly the autobiography of Raj Chatterjee also a former executive at Imperial Tobacco in Calcutta is titled The Boxwallah and the Middleman 10 Similarly corporate executive R Gopalakrishnan has used the expression while referring to old British companies in Calcutta such as Andrew Yule Balmer Lawrie and Martin Burn names that have now virtually vanished 11 Other authors to use the term boxwallah in the second sense include Amit Chaudhuri 12 and Pavan Verma 13 However even though referring to elite corporate professionals the use of the term boxwallah was still considered somewhat derogatory owing to its original colonial association with street peddlers 14 15 The advent of the Indian Institutes of Management are thought to have led to elite boxwallah executives from liberal arts backgrounds becoming redundant With the liberalisation of the Indian economy the term boxwallah has become less common with changes in management culture In the 1980s Arabinda Ray then executive director of General Electric in India spoke of the need for industry to transition from the image of a boxwallah to the modern professional manager advocating the hiring of talent from the Indian Institutes of Management and the Indian Institutes of Technology 16 Chatterjee in a chapter his autobiography titled Requiem for a Boxwallah describes how executives like him were eventually succeeded by Brash young men with degrees in business administration who thought that our ideas were outdated our pace too slow 10 Anup Sinha former professor at the Indian Institute of Management Calcutta has explained the shift as follows The British colonial model of running businesses was on the way out as were the companies themselves The age of the box wallah was over and the managerial characteristics of having a liberal arts education with a good family background and communication skills became redundant There was a shift of focus in managerial skills towards production and operations and away from sales and marketing The old British model was found wanting and India turned to the US model with its emphasis on technical competence and rigorous training in the science of management 17 Boxwallah English EditIn 1845 an article in The New Monthly Magazine and Humorist referred to the grammatically incorrect dialect of English spoken by boxwallahs peddlers in Calcutta The article stated Every one of these superlative pedlars declares he is mem s own boxwallah and each protests that he money not want mem say her own price 18 In 1891 the linguist Hugo Schuchardt identified Boxwallah English as one of five types of pidgin English spoken in India association the dialect with street peddlers in Upper India 19 In postcolonial India Braj Bihari Kachru similarly identified Boxwallah English as a distinct form of English Some examples of expressions in Boxwallah English given by Kachru are I come go This good fresh ten rupee He thief me and price good 20 In contrast certain elite English accents appear to have been equated with that spoken by elite postcolonial boxwallahs For example Stephen Fry has described the film director Robin Hardy as possessing a rather box wallah version of an upper class accent 21 In his novel A Fine Family Gurcharan Das has said of a character A N Rao Neena s father was a boxwallah and one of the first Indian directors of a British company based in Bombay He sported an ascot and a tweed jacket he was the sort of person who spoke Hindustani with an Oxford accent 22 Boxwallah in literature Edit Rudyard KiplingRudyard Kipling was particularly attracted by the idea of a boxwallah and the idea of a boxwallah is present in several of his short stories In From Sea to Sea Kipling talks of a mistreated Burmese girl as if she were a Delhi Boxwallah presumably because the protagonist bargained too hard with her non primary source needed In The Sending of Dana Da the title character makes a deathbed reference to his former life as a boxwallah non primary source needed Evelyn Waugh also mentions a wallah at the end of his short story Incident in Azania 23 Boxwallah in cinema EditSatyajit Ray s film Seemabaddha Company limited is regarded as a portrayal of a boxwallah in the elite postcolonial sense of the term i e a westernised corporate executive in Calcutta 24 25 26 The protagonist in the film played by Barun Chanda works with a fictitious British fan manufacturing company called Hindusthan Peters 27 Ray himself described the film as a definitive film about the boxwallahs 28 In Anik Dutta s 2019 film Bhobishyoter Bhoot one of the characters in the film also played by Chanda is a corporate executive from early postcolonial Calcutta referred to as a boxwallah in the film The Boxwallah is also the title of an ITV Playhouse TV film that aired on 31 July 1982 and starred Leo McKern and Rachel Kempson 29 References Edit Boxwallah definition and meaning Collins English Dictionary collinsdictionary com Retrieved 13 November 2021 Belgravia Willmer amp Rogers 1876 Katherine Sister 1900 Towards the Land of the Rising Sun Or Four Years in Burma Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Macdonald Frederika 1887 Puck and Pearl the wanderings and wonderings of two English children in India Chapman and Hall Limited a b Yule Sir Henry Burnell Arthur Coke 1996 Hobson Jobson The Anglo Indian Dictionary Wordsworth Editions ISBN 978 1 85326 363 7 Barrere Albert Leland Charles Godfrey 1889 A Dictionary of Slang Jargon amp Cant Embracing English American and Anglo Indian Slang Pidgin English Tinker s Jargon and Other Irregular Phraseology Ballantyne Press Smith Ronald Vivian 2008 Capital Vignettes A Peep into Delhi s Ethos Rupa amp Company ISBN 978 81 291 1317 7 a b c d Naipaul V S 1 September 2002 The Writer and the World The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 11 November 2021 a b Naipaul V S 17 November 2016 The Indian Trilogy Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 1 5098 5238 3 a b Chatterjee Raj 2008 The Boxwallah and the Middleman Penguin Books India p 31 ISBN 978 0 14 306316 2 Gopalakrishnan R 27 September 2016 When the Penny Drops Learning What s Not Taught Penguin UK ISBN 978 81 8475 398 1 Chaudhuri Amit 14 February 2013 Calcutta Two Years in the City Aurum Press ISBN 978 1 908526 31 1 Varma Pavan K 2005 Being Indian The Truth about why the Twenty first Century Will be India s Penguin Books India ISBN 978 0 14 303342 4 Masani Zareer 1988 Indian Tales of the Raj University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07127 8 Jones Stephanie 18 June 1992 Merchants of the Raj British Managing Agency Houses in Calcutta Yesterday and Today Springer ISBN 978 1 349 12538 8 Ray Arabinda October 1984 After the First Generation Decision Calcutta 11 4 ProQuest 1297775104 Sinha Anup 2017 From Management Institutes to Business Schools An Indian Journey Management Education in India pp 43 53 doi 10 1007 978 981 10 1696 7 3 ISBN 978 981 10 1695 0 The New Monthly Magazine and Humorist Chapman and Hall 1843 Schuchardt Hugo 1980 Indo English 1891 Pidgin and Creole Languages Selected Essays by Hugo Schuchardt Cambridge University Press pp 38 64 ISBN 978 0 521 22789 6 Kachru Braj B 1 February 2005 Asian Englishes Beyond the Canon Hong Kong University Press p 42 ISBN 978 962 209 665 3 Fry Stephen 2014 More Fool Me Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 7181 7755 3 page needed Das Gurcharan 1990 A Fine Family Penguin Books India p 175 ISBN 978 0 14 012258 9 The Complete Stories Evelyn Waugh Hachette Book Group 2011 page needed Sanyal Devapriya 10 December 2021 Gendered Modernity and Indian Cinema The Women in Satyajit Ray s Films Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 50919 9 Simpson Paul 26 May 2011 Movie Lists 397 Ways to Pick a DVD Profile Books ISBN 978 1 84765 355 0 Pioneer The A few snapshots from Calcutta Circa 1960 The Pioneer India Retrieved 11 November 2021 Sanyal Devapriya Camera and action The Soumendu Roy Satyajit Ray teamwork that produced some of our greatest films Scroll in Retrieved 11 November 2021 Robinson Andrew 23 September 2021 Satyajit Ray The Inner Eye The Biography of a Master Film Maker Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 350 25852 5 ITV Playhouse The Boxwallah 1982 at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boxwallah amp oldid 1153326640, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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