66 SOCIAL SCIENTIST
83. To get an idea about the approaches of the historians of this school see Ranajit Guha (ed.). Subaltern Studies I and II (New Delhi, 1982, IW). For a critique of the subaltern school see Sangita Singh, et. al.» 'Subaltern Studies II' in Social Scientist, Oct. 1974.
84. It should be clarified here that these tables concentrate mostly 6K -those who were arrested or figured in the police reports.
85. Based on CFLN, op. cit.
86. Based on Nanda, ap. at., pp. 118-120.
87. In fact the popularity enjoyed by the Congress leaders in MalkangUi was remarkable. While interviewing Dhangamajhi, op. c
88. Here I am echoing Marx, *The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte', in Selected Works, Vol. I (Moscow, 1977), p. 479.
89. See, for example, Georges Lefebvre. The Great Fear of 1789 : Rural PtMic in Revolutionary France (London, 1973). translated by P. White, especially Chapter 2 to get an idea about this dimension.
90. George Rude, The Crowd w History : A Study of Popular Disturbance in France and England 1730-1898 (New York. 1964). p. 4.
91. CFLN.
92. Interview : Pujari. Sanganna had not contested from this coestituwy 'MI the
1952 elections.