In 1915 a rebellion broke out among the Fifth Light Infantry of the British Indian Army, which was stationed in Singapore. Several historical studies on the Singapore Mutiny are already available, but so far no analysis has been offered of the ways in which gender issues became entwined within British constructions of the significance of the rebellion. This article explores some gender matters arising from the Singapore Mutiny. It considers how the British colonizers created gendered interpretations of the uprising, with images of lecherous as well as treacherous Indian rebels targeting British womanhood
In this chapter I would like to explore some of the theoretical complexities around the retrieval of...
In this chapter I would like to explore some of the theoretical complexities around the retrieval of...
This article discusses an incident in Singapore where approximately half of the Bengal 5th Light inf...
In this paper we consider the influences of the Indian Mutiny or Uprising of 1857 on gender formatio...
In this paper we consider the influences of the Indian Mutiny or Uprising of 1857 on gender formatio...
In this paper we consider the influences of the Indian Mutiny or Uprising of 1857 on gender formatio...
This article describes a confrontation between a Sepoy regiment and British soldiers in Singapore.Re...
This essay offers an exploration of the tropes and stereotypes that came to define the Anglo-Indian ...
This essay offers an exploration of the tropes and stereotypes that came to define the Anglo-Indian ...
This article briefly describes an incident in Singapore between an Indian sepoy regiment and the Bri...
In 1897, Hilda Gregg wrote from the pages of Blackwood’s Magazine that “Of all the great events of t...
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to understand how, in tough economic times, British-owned, Englis...
This article states that unrest in Singapore, caused by a confrontation between a Sepoy regiment and...
The 1857-59 Indian Uprising was a cataclysmic event in the history of the British Empire in India an...
Indigenous girls often appear as silent bystanders in the annals of British Malaya. Yet, their activ...
In this chapter I would like to explore some of the theoretical complexities around the retrieval of...
In this chapter I would like to explore some of the theoretical complexities around the retrieval of...
This article discusses an incident in Singapore where approximately half of the Bengal 5th Light inf...
In this paper we consider the influences of the Indian Mutiny or Uprising of 1857 on gender formatio...
In this paper we consider the influences of the Indian Mutiny or Uprising of 1857 on gender formatio...
In this paper we consider the influences of the Indian Mutiny or Uprising of 1857 on gender formatio...
This article describes a confrontation between a Sepoy regiment and British soldiers in Singapore.Re...
This essay offers an exploration of the tropes and stereotypes that came to define the Anglo-Indian ...
This essay offers an exploration of the tropes and stereotypes that came to define the Anglo-Indian ...
This article briefly describes an incident in Singapore between an Indian sepoy regiment and the Bri...
In 1897, Hilda Gregg wrote from the pages of Blackwood’s Magazine that “Of all the great events of t...
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to understand how, in tough economic times, British-owned, Englis...
This article states that unrest in Singapore, caused by a confrontation between a Sepoy regiment and...
The 1857-59 Indian Uprising was a cataclysmic event in the history of the British Empire in India an...
Indigenous girls often appear as silent bystanders in the annals of British Malaya. Yet, their activ...
In this chapter I would like to explore some of the theoretical complexities around the retrieval of...
In this chapter I would like to explore some of the theoretical complexities around the retrieval of...
This article discusses an incident in Singapore where approximately half of the Bengal 5th Light inf...