During the second half of the eighteenth century the British East India Company popularised the image of India as a hub for rich and eligible bachelors and did consequential work to woo Englishwomen to the Colony. By the nineteenth century ship loads of Englishwomen who went by the cult name of ‘Fishing Fleets’ braved perilous lands and seas and started coming to India to find a ‘suitable’ husband and thereby a ‘better life’ for themselves. The White women who came to India—popularly termed as ‘memsahibs’—gradually settled all over the country and started to create a ‘home’ away from home. It was during this period of time that they started developing their own corpus of texts. This thesis reads memsahibs’ texts—primarily manuals, travelogu...
Following the 1857-1858 Mutiny and its expression of Indian hostility to British rule, the British r...
This study explores the repatriation processes of the white, British, middle-class wives of army off...
India and Indians feature prominently in contemporary Anglophone fiction. The last quarter of a cent...
This thesis examines British women’s political participation within the official community in India ...
This study focuses on the British wives of civil servants and army officers who lived in India from...
This study focuses on the British wives of civil servants and army officers who lived in India from...
This dissertation examines nineteenth-century manifestations of colonial intimacy in a range of text...
Since the mid-eighteenth century, British families have relied on South Asian women known as ayahs t...
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...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
While men held the titles of governor and viceroy in British India, it was women who were responsibl...
Following the 1857-1858 Mutiny and its expression of Indian hostility to British rule, the British r...
This study explores the repatriation processes of the white, British, middle-class wives of army off...
India and Indians feature prominently in contemporary Anglophone fiction. The last quarter of a cent...
This thesis examines British women’s political participation within the official community in India ...
This study focuses on the British wives of civil servants and army officers who lived in India from...
This study focuses on the British wives of civil servants and army officers who lived in India from...
This dissertation examines nineteenth-century manifestations of colonial intimacy in a range of text...
Since the mid-eighteenth century, British families have relied on South Asian women known as ayahs t...
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...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
Within postcolonial studies, Britain’s long contact with India has been read generally only within t...
While men held the titles of governor and viceroy in British India, it was women who were responsibl...
Following the 1857-1858 Mutiny and its expression of Indian hostility to British rule, the British r...
This study explores the repatriation processes of the white, British, middle-class wives of army off...
India and Indians feature prominently in contemporary Anglophone fiction. The last quarter of a cent...