This article explores how the rural areas of East Pakistan—Bangladesh since 1971—experienced the postcolonial state during 1947–70. How did the rural population react when facing the state-building efforts? An exploration of this question would reveal how the state carried forward the ‘burdens’ of colonial administration and approach for governance, as well as the ways in which the pre-existing society continued to mould the postcolonial ‘state’. Focusing away from the national elites, this article investigates the dynamics among the rural population, the local elites and the development bureaucracy. The article locates power dynamics in the spatial and temporal realities of social life. Finally, the article indicates to what extent and in which ways continuities and changes occurred during the postcolonial state period (1947–70) for the rural people in pre-independence Bangladesh.
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