WARS HAVE A WAY of throwing the spotlight on labour relations—more so total wars, premised on men, munition and mobilisation. Key workers who are otherwise invisible at once become visible, not least because the working classes are critical to the prosecution of war. Yet, as the historian Radhika Singha shows, they are easily written out of history.
A flood of appreciation for the contributions of non-white soldiers to the Allied fight against the Central Powers filled the airwaves on the centenary of the First World War in 2014. Scarcely a murmur, however, was heard about their “followers”: those who worked as latrine cleaners, construction workers, mule drivers, stretcher bearers, water carriers, gardeners, blacksmiths, cooks, grooms, laundrymen, porters and sweepers. It is the agency of this class that Singha uncovers in…