Images of maternal distress and maternal deviance were frequently invoked in order to mobilise British women in support of her ‘heathen’ sisters overseas. Yet these accounts were not uniform in their interpretation of Indian maternity, or its relationship to emerging Victorian ideals of motherhood. This paper explores ideas of maternal danger, distress and deviance as they appeared in evangelical and colonial discourses of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, revealing complex and ambivalent responses and challenging the idea that Indian woman were simply one-dimensional signifiers of victimhood within gendered constructions of the ‘civilising mission’
Victorian Britain is characterized by the growth of an urban industrial economy and the emergence of...
New Woman writers’ explorations of motherhood came at the end of the nineteenth century when pressur...
Thinking about one’s own mother as an individual, distinct from the role she has taken on, is all bu...
Following the Mutiny of 1857, the transfer of power from the East India Company to the British Crown...
Since the mid-eighteenth century, British families have relied on South Asian women known as ayahs t...
In the late 1850s, a young woman, orphaned as a child in India under the Raj, ran away from unsympat...
Following the 1857-1858 Mutiny and its expression of Indian hostility to British rule, the British r...
This dissertation attempts to analyze how Western-style medical care for women was conceived and org...
Restricted until 25 July 2009.The systemic murder of female infants, while formerly a feature of man...
During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the imag...
Following the murder of a Bombay prostitute in 1917, the Government of India launched a series of in...
The maternal representation of India as a nation that rebelled against the oppressive colonial rule ...
This book is about Victorian women’s representations of colonial life in India. These accounts contr...
This paper explores the incorporation and uses of women within dominant historical accounts of colon...
Maternal imagination is the notion that a pregnant woman could alter the development of her foetus w...
Victorian Britain is characterized by the growth of an urban industrial economy and the emergence of...
New Woman writers’ explorations of motherhood came at the end of the nineteenth century when pressur...
Thinking about one’s own mother as an individual, distinct from the role she has taken on, is all bu...
Following the Mutiny of 1857, the transfer of power from the East India Company to the British Crown...
Since the mid-eighteenth century, British families have relied on South Asian women known as ayahs t...
In the late 1850s, a young woman, orphaned as a child in India under the Raj, ran away from unsympat...
Following the 1857-1858 Mutiny and its expression of Indian hostility to British rule, the British r...
This dissertation attempts to analyze how Western-style medical care for women was conceived and org...
Restricted until 25 July 2009.The systemic murder of female infants, while formerly a feature of man...
During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the imag...
Following the murder of a Bombay prostitute in 1917, the Government of India launched a series of in...
The maternal representation of India as a nation that rebelled against the oppressive colonial rule ...
This book is about Victorian women’s representations of colonial life in India. These accounts contr...
This paper explores the incorporation and uses of women within dominant historical accounts of colon...
Maternal imagination is the notion that a pregnant woman could alter the development of her foetus w...
Victorian Britain is characterized by the growth of an urban industrial economy and the emergence of...
New Woman writers’ explorations of motherhood came at the end of the nineteenth century when pressur...
Thinking about one’s own mother as an individual, distinct from the role she has taken on, is all bu...