This book explores the impact of railways on colonial Indian society from the  commencement of railway operations in the mid-nineteenth to the early decades  of the twentieth century.  The book represents a historiographical departure. Using new archival evidence  as well as travelogues written by Indian railway travellers in Bengali and Hindi,  this book suggests that the impact of railways on colonial Indian society were  more heterogeneous and complex than anticipated either by India's colonial  railway builders or currently assumed by post-colonial scholars.  At a related level, the book argues that this complex outcome of the impact of  railways on colonial Indian society was a product of the interaction between the  colonial context of technology transfer and the Indian railway passengers who  mediated this process at an everyday level. In other words, this book claims  that the colonised 'natives' were not bystanders in this process of imposition of  an imperial technology from above. On the contrary, Indians, both as railway  passengers and otherwise influenced the nature and the direction of the impact of  an oft-celebrated 'tool of Empire'.  The historiographical departures suggested in the book are based on examining  railway spaces as social spaces - a methodological index influenced by Henri  Lefebvre's idea of social spaces as means of control, domination and power.