Description

Book Synopsis
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within the context of imperialism to inform our understanding of race, gender, identity, and power within colonialism. Such postcolonial interpretations that focus on single dimensions of identity risk disregarding the sense of displacement, discontinuities, and discomforts that compromised everyday life for the British in India—the Anglo-Indians—during the Raj. Imperialism as Diaspora reconsiders the urgencies, governing principles, and modes of being of the Anglo-Indians by approaching Britain’s imperial relationship with India from new, interdisciplinary directions. Moving freely between the disciplines of literature, history, and art this new work offers readers a more nuanced and comprehensive understanding of the lives of Anglo-Indians. Focussing on the years between the Indian Mutiny of 1857 and Independence in 1947—the period of the British Raj in India—Imperialism as Diaspora at once sets in motion the multidisciplinary fields of cultural and social history, art and iconography, and literary productions while carefully maintaining the tension between imperialism and diaspora in a ground-breaking reassessment of Anglo-India. Crane and Mohanram examine the seamless continuum between cultural history, the semiotics of art, and Anglo-Indian literary works. Specifically, they focus on the influence of the Sepoy Mutiny on Anglo-Indian identity; the trope of duty and the white man’s burden on the racialization of Anglo-India; the role of the missionary and the status of Christianity in India; and gender, love and contamination within mixed marriages.

Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction: Race, Gender, and Diaspora: Explorations of Anglo-India
  • Chapter One: Masculinity Forged Under Siege: The Indian Mutiny of 1857
  • Chapter Two: The Terrains of Identity: Mimicry and the Great Game
  • Chapter Three: The Missionary’s Position: Love and Passion in Anglo-India
  • Chapter Four: The Laws of Desire: Intimacy and Agency in Anglo-India
  • Epilogue: Imperialism as Diaspora
  • Bibliography
  • Index

Imperialism as Diaspora: Race, Sexuality, and

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    A Hardback by Ralph Crane, Radhika Mohanram

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      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 31/08/2013
      ISBN13: 9781846318962, 978-1846318962
      ISBN10: 1846318963

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within the context of imperialism to inform our understanding of race, gender, identity, and power within colonialism. Such postcolonial interpretations that focus on single dimensions of identity risk disregarding the sense of displacement, discontinuities, and discomforts that compromised everyday life for the British in India—the Anglo-Indians—during the Raj. Imperialism as Diaspora reconsiders the urgencies, governing principles, and modes of being of the Anglo-Indians by approaching Britain’s imperial relationship with India from new, interdisciplinary directions. Moving freely between the disciplines of literature, history, and art this new work offers readers a more nuanced and comprehensive understanding of the lives of Anglo-Indians. Focussing on the years between the Indian Mutiny of 1857 and Independence in 1947—the period of the British Raj in India—Imperialism as Diaspora at once sets in motion the multidisciplinary fields of cultural and social history, art and iconography, and literary productions while carefully maintaining the tension between imperialism and diaspora in a ground-breaking reassessment of Anglo-India. Crane and Mohanram examine the seamless continuum between cultural history, the semiotics of art, and Anglo-Indian literary works. Specifically, they focus on the influence of the Sepoy Mutiny on Anglo-Indian identity; the trope of duty and the white man’s burden on the racialization of Anglo-India; the role of the missionary and the status of Christianity in India; and gender, love and contamination within mixed marriages.

      Table of Contents
      • Acknowledgements
      • List of Illustrations
      • Introduction: Race, Gender, and Diaspora: Explorations of Anglo-India
      • Chapter One: Masculinity Forged Under Siege: The Indian Mutiny of 1857
      • Chapter Two: The Terrains of Identity: Mimicry and the Great Game
      • Chapter Three: The Missionary’s Position: Love and Passion in Anglo-India
      • Chapter Four: The Laws of Desire: Intimacy and Agency in Anglo-India
      • Epilogue: Imperialism as Diaspora
      • Bibliography
      • Index

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