Guha in 2024 during a lecture at National Law School of India
Born
(1958-04-29) 29 April 1958 (age 66)
Dehradun, India[1]
Alma mater
University of Delhi (BA, MA) IIM Calcutta (Fellowship Program)
Occupation(s)
Historian, author, public intellectual, distinguished University professor at Krea University
Notable work
India After Gandhi
Gandhi Before India
Gandhi: The Years That Changed the World
Spouse
Sujata Keshavan
Website
ramachandraguha.in
Signature
Ramachandra "Ram" Guha[a] (born 29 April 1958) is an Indian historian, environmentalist, writer and public intellectual whose research interests include social, political, contemporary, environmental and cricket history, and the field of economics. He is an important authority on the history of modern India.
For the years 2011–12, he held a visiting position at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), occupying the Philippe Roman Chair in History and International Affairs. Guha was a visiting professor at the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru. The American Historical Association (AHA) has conferred its Honorary Foreign Member prize for the year 2019 on Ramchandra Guha. He is the third Indian historian to be recognised by the association, joining the ranks of Romila Thapar and Jadunath Sarkar, who received the honour in 2009 and 1952, respectively.
Covering a wide range of subjects, Guha has produced three major books of modern India's socio-political history. Among them, Gandhi Before India (2013) and Gandhi: The Years That Changed the World (2018), are the two volumes of biography of Mahatma Gandhi, an icon of the Indian independence movement. The other being India After Gandhi (2007), an account of the history of India from 1947-2017, which received commercial and critical success.
He is a trustee of New India Foundation fellowship programme. He was appointed to BCCI's panel of administrators by the Supreme Court of India in January 2017, but stepped down from his position citing personal reasons five months later. A regular contributor to various academic journals, Guha has also written for The Caravan and Outlook magazines. His book India After Gandhi is read by aspirants of the Indian civil services examination.[22] He is a columnist for The Telegraph, Hindustan Times, and Hindi daily newspaper, Amar Ujala. Guha was listed among the 100 most powerful Indians in 2022 by The Indian Express.[23]
^"Ramachandra Guha: Celebrating the life of Keshav Desiraju – a true Nehruvian Indian". Scroll. Scroll.in. 12 September 2021. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
^"Modi is a study in self love," Ram Guha at The Wire Dialogues, archived from the original on 21 December 2021, retrieved 5 September 2021
^Ramachandra Guha (23 November 2020). "When Rahul Dravid told Ram Guha to 'shut up' about cricket strategy, write history books". ThePrint. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Advani, Rukun (29 April 2021). "'He was what was called in those days a sports type': Ram Guha through the eyes of Rukun Advani". Scroll.in. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^"Ramachandra Guha: Is Ram Guha's hate for Modi behind his racist stereotyping of Gujaratis?". Times of India Blog. 12 June 2020. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^"Opinion: In Response To Ram Guha's View Of Rahul Gandhi - by Salman Khurshid". NDTV.com. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Mamata Must Not Behave Like Modi: Ram Guha, archived from the original on 21 December 2021, retrieved 5 September 2021
^Pioneer, The. "Celebration of a genius". The Pioneer. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^"'Kerala did a disastrous thing by electing Rahul Gandhi':Ram Guha at KLF". The News Minute. 18 January 2020. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Nanda, Prashant K. (16 October 2018). "Historian Ram Guha to join Ahmedabad University as professor". mint. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Quint, The (19 December 2019). "CAA: Historian Ram Guha Detained, Says 'Rulers in Delhi Scared'". TheQuint. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^"Ram Guha vs Salman Khurshid: Who you support? - Conversation - Legally India". www.legallyindia.com. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^"Ram Guha retires hurt. Was it to protest Kumble treatment?". The New Indian Express. 3 June 2017. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^"Yogendra Yadav, Ram Guha and others say citizens' resources should be treated as govt resources; infuriates Twitter". Free Press Journal. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^"An Unlikely Democracy". www.law.columbia.edu. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Editorial (9 March 2011). "In praise of … Ramachandra Guha | Editorial". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^"Ram Guha must know: Sonia, Rahul leaving space 'won't help' secularism, democracy". 29 December 2020. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Vardhan, Anand (12 November 2017). "The anxieties of Ram Guha, the compulsive adviser". Newslaundry. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Desk, InsideSport (1 June 2017). "Citing personal reasons, Ram Guha quits BCCI panel". InsideSport. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Patel, Aakar (5 November 2018). "And then they came for Ram Guha". news.abplive.com. Retrieved 5 September 2021.
^Jaishankar, Dhruva (6 February 2018). "India's 5 most important public intellectuals – and what this list says about our national discourse". Scroll.in. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
^"IE 100 2022: List of most powerful Indians". The Indian Express. 21 April 2022. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).
Ramachandra "Ram" Guha (born 29 April 1958) is an Indian historian, environmentalist, writer and public intellectual whose research interests include social...
World's Largest Democracy is a non-fiction book by Indian historian RamachandraGuha. First published by HarperCollins in August 2007. The book covers the...
nineteenth-century Indian mathematician RamachandraGuha (born 1958), an Indian historian and economist Galla Ramachandra Naidu, an Indian industrialist All...
Modern India is a non-fiction book written by Indian historian-scholar RamachandraGuha and published by Penguin India in 2010. The book features profiles...
Archived from the original on 20 February 2018. Retrieved 23 April 2014. RamachandraGuha (2008). India After Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest Democracy...
his integrity, knowledge, simplicity and pragmatism, with historian RamachandraGuha placing him among the few ministers who "shall be remembered for having...
Gandhi Before India is a 2013 book by the Indian historian RamachandraGuha, the first part of a two-volume biography of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. The...
Land: An Ecological History of India is a book by Madhav Gadgil and RamachandraGuha on the ecological history of India. It examines 'prudent' (sustainable)...
election infrastructure to reduce costs and improve efficiency. Historian RamachandraGuha wrote "this general election cost the exchequer Rs45 million less than...
to Mountbatten". www.jammu-kashmir.com. Retrieved 10 January 2020. Ramachandra., Guha (1 January 2008). India after Gandhi : the history of the world's...
holders of the chair include James Lovelock, David Sloan Wilson and RamachandraGuha. Muy lejos está cerca. Lima: RedGE, 2022. Extractivisms: Politics,...
Kashmiri Pandit refugees in Jammu hoped for rehabilitation. The historian RamachandraGuha said that the President of India had apparently acted in "haste" and...
in Kannada language, playwright and an ecological conservationist. RamachandraGuha called him the "Rabindranath Tagore of Modern India, who has been one...
its predecessor, with Vajpayee being its first president. Historian RamachandraGuha writes that the early 1980s were marked by a wave of violence between...
Indian History of a British Sport is a 2002 book by Indian historian RamachandraGuha that offers a historical account of cricket in the Indian subcontinent...
Gadgil, RamachandraGuha (1992). This Fissured Land. Oxford University Press India. p. 312. ISBN 9780198077442. Madhav Gadgil, RamachandraGuha (1995)...
London, United Kingdom: Simon & Schuster. p. 78. ISBN 9781416522256. RamachandraGuha (15 August 2009). "The Rise and Fall of the Bilingual Intellectual"...
later he scored 93 against the visiting Pakistanis. Cricket writer RamachandraGuha writes that he would have made the national side had he not come from...
early 1954, Nehru visited the dam to formally inaugurate it. Historian RamachandraGuha writes: As he [Nehru] flicked on the switch of the power house, Dakotas...