This dissertation examines nineteenth-century manifestations of colonial intimacy in a range of texts produced by Anglo-Indians, capturing their colonial experience from the 1830s to the 1880s. Through these texts, I examine the ideological implications of interracial intimacy in a range of relationships that were established between the Indians and British in the \u27contact zone.\u27 The first two chapters examine the letters of Emily Eden and Fanny Parks to probe British women\u27s experience of India. I argue that the women forge an alternative space of intimacy that defies the notion that Anglo-Indian women remained on the periphery of Indian space as female ethnographers using their pen and pencil to engage in the act of colonial appr...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
Following the murder of a Bombay prostitute in 1917, the Government of India launched a series of in...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
In mid- to late-nineteenth-century literature, the narratives of empire surrender to their own sexua...
This dissertation suggests we regard critics of empire as belonging to a subcategory of the dominant...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
This article examines Anglo-Indian romance novels written by British women during the period of the ...
This paper explores the incorporation and uses of women within dominant historical accounts of colon...
During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the imag...
The British men and women who lived in India to fulfil their imperial duties were known as the ‘Angl...
Although many recent historical works on the Raj examine issues of race and gender in the imperial c...
British India and Victorian Culture extends current scholarship on the Victorian period with a wide-...
Since the mid-eighteenth century, British families have relied on South Asian women known as ayahs t...
This article examines Anglo-Indian romance novels written by British women during the period of the ...
This dissertation is a study of imperialist and nationalist constructions of modern Indian history, ...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
Following the murder of a Bombay prostitute in 1917, the Government of India launched a series of in...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
In mid- to late-nineteenth-century literature, the narratives of empire surrender to their own sexua...
This dissertation suggests we regard critics of empire as belonging to a subcategory of the dominant...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
This article examines Anglo-Indian romance novels written by British women during the period of the ...
This paper explores the incorporation and uses of women within dominant historical accounts of colon...
During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the imag...
The British men and women who lived in India to fulfil their imperial duties were known as the ‘Angl...
Although many recent historical works on the Raj examine issues of race and gender in the imperial c...
British India and Victorian Culture extends current scholarship on the Victorian period with a wide-...
Since the mid-eighteenth century, British families have relied on South Asian women known as ayahs t...
This article examines Anglo-Indian romance novels written by British women during the period of the ...
This dissertation is a study of imperialist and nationalist constructions of modern Indian history, ...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...
Following the murder of a Bombay prostitute in 1917, the Government of India launched a series of in...
This study explores how female authored travel texts and their reviews reveal the diversity of disco...