# Civil Service Rules: (Post)Colonial Memoir and the Raj Revival, 1970–1985

**Authors:** Sam Goodman

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/03061973241247502 · Literature & History · 2024-05-21

## TL;DR

This paper explores how civil service memoirs from the 1970s to 1985 reflect postcolonial identity and the revival of colonial narratives in Britain.

## Contribution

The paper introduces civil service memoirs as a new source for understanding postcolonial cultural and historical narratives.

## Key findings

- Civil service memoirs reveal insights into the end of the British Empire.
- The memoirs engage with colonial fictions, blurring fiction and life writing.
- They are part of a broader cultural trend known as the 'Raj Revival.'

## Abstract

In the 1970s, the India Office Archive within the British Library began inviting the last generation of the Indian Civil Service and Indian Political Service to commit their experiences to written record. Running until the mid-1980s and eventually producing 135 manuscript memoirs, this archive offers a unique insight into the end of the British Empire, as seen a generation hence. This article argues that these memoirs, generated in a time of crisis and fracture within British national identity, are not only vital historical sources but are a significant body of creative work within the context of acute cultural production of narratives of Empire known as the ‘Raj Revival’. Moreover, in their acknowledgement, inclusion and direct dialogue with colonial fictions from Kipling to Forster, as well as their own aesthetic form, these memoirs are part of the long tendency towards the blurring of the boundaries between fiction and life writing within the historical publishing cultures of British India.

## Full text

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## Figures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13021066