The White Author’s Burden: Justifications of Empire in the Fiction of British India identifies a transformation in Anglo-Indian literature by exploring various fictional works (including novels, short stories, and poems) written by British authors between 1800 and 1924. Before 1857 (the year of the widespread Indian Rebellions that challenged British rule), Anglo-Indian literature focused exclusively on British life in India. Interactions with Indians were minimal, if present at all. After this date, however, British authors began to portray India and Indians almost entirely in ways that justified their own rule. This shift in the literature suggests that the British felt a new need to justify their empire. This thesis focuses on three lite...
\u22Gambling on Empire\u22 offers the first extended study of a central trope governing literary rep...
Abstract The paper traces the problematic relationship between different races and political conflic...
Britain in the 18th century was more deeply involved with the world beyond its shores than ever befo...
The White Author’s Burden: Justifications of Empire in the Fiction of British India identifies a tra...
“Rudyard Kipling in his famous poem, The White Man’s Burden (1899) wrote about a generation of white...
India and Indians feature prominently in contemporary Anglophone fiction. The last quarter of a cent...
1 Over three centuries after the arrival of the first printing press on the Indian subcontinent, in ...
This thesis investigates British fictional representations of India in novels, plays and poetry fro...
British India and Victorian Culture extends current scholarship on the Victorian period with a wide-...
During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the imag...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
Prior to the British colonization of India, racism and violence existed long before Britain's intrus...
While visiting England in the early 1870s, the prodigiously talented teenage writer Toru Dutt met “L...
This dissertation is a study of imperialist and nationalist constructions of modern Indian history, ...
Although many recent historical works on the Raj examine issues of race and gender in the imperial c...
\u22Gambling on Empire\u22 offers the first extended study of a central trope governing literary rep...
Abstract The paper traces the problematic relationship between different races and political conflic...
Britain in the 18th century was more deeply involved with the world beyond its shores than ever befo...
The White Author’s Burden: Justifications of Empire in the Fiction of British India identifies a tra...
“Rudyard Kipling in his famous poem, The White Man’s Burden (1899) wrote about a generation of white...
India and Indians feature prominently in contemporary Anglophone fiction. The last quarter of a cent...
1 Over three centuries after the arrival of the first printing press on the Indian subcontinent, in ...
This thesis investigates British fictional representations of India in novels, plays and poetry fro...
British India and Victorian Culture extends current scholarship on the Victorian period with a wide-...
During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the imag...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
Prior to the British colonization of India, racism and violence existed long before Britain's intrus...
While visiting England in the early 1870s, the prodigiously talented teenage writer Toru Dutt met “L...
This dissertation is a study of imperialist and nationalist constructions of modern Indian history, ...
Although many recent historical works on the Raj examine issues of race and gender in the imperial c...
\u22Gambling on Empire\u22 offers the first extended study of a central trope governing literary rep...
Abstract The paper traces the problematic relationship between different races and political conflic...
Britain in the 18th century was more deeply involved with the world beyond its shores than ever befo...