This is a cultural history of the British Empire in India presented through ten key non-literary texts. Each of these texts embodies a particular attitude, ideology and/or development in imperial thinking, administrative process or cultural practices, and it is this attitude, ideology and development that the book unpacks through a reading of the texts, along with excerpts from the original documents. The aim is to flag and signpost momentous events and ideas through imperial texts such as J.Z. Holwell's 1756 account of the Black Hole of Calcutta, T.B. Macaulay's 1835 'Minute' on Indian…mehr
This is a cultural history of the British Empire in India presented through ten key non-literary texts. Each of these texts embodies a particular attitude, ideology and/or development in imperial thinking, administrative process or cultural practices, and it is this attitude, ideology and development that the book unpacks through a reading of the texts, along with excerpts from the original documents. The aim is to flag and signpost momentous events and ideas through imperial texts such as J.Z. Holwell's 1756 account of the Black Hole of Calcutta, T.B. Macaulay's 1835 'Minute' on Indian education and Flora Annie Steel and Grace Gardiner's 1888 advice book on colonial domesticity, The Complete Indian Housekeeper and Cook. Through this book, it is hoped, the reader will get a flavour and glimpse of the complex and complicated structure that was the Raj. The book will appeal not only to the academic audience and literary scholars keen on the rhetoric of empire but also to the general, informed readers.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Pramod K. Nayar, FEA, FRHistS, teaches at the Department of English, University of Hyderabad, India. His most recent books include Alzheimer's Disease Memoirs (2021), The Human Rights Graphic Novel (2021), E coprecarity: Vulnerable Lives in Literature and Culture (2019), Brand Postcolonial:'Third World' Texts and the Global (2018), Bhopal's Ecological Gothic: Disaster, Precarity and the Biopolitical Uncanny (2017), Human Rights and Literature: Writing Right (2016) and the edited collection Indian Travel Writing 1830-1947 (2016). His essays have appeared in Modern Fiction Studies, South Asian Review, South Asia, Narrative, Celebrity Studies, Asiatic, Journal of Postcolonial Writing, Prose Studies, a/b: Auto/Biography Studies, Biography, Image and Text and Postcolonial Text, among others. Nayar also holds the UNESCO Chair in Vulnerability Studies at the University of Hyderabad.
Inhaltsangabe
Prefatory Note Introduction Acknowledgements 1. Imperial Business Charter Granted by Queen Elizabeth, to the Governor and Company of Merchants of London, Trading Into the East Indies, Dated the 31st December, in the 43rd Year of Her Reign, Anno Domini, 1600. 2. Imperial Prospecting Robert Boyle, 'Inquiries for Suratte and Other Parts of the East-Indies', Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 2. 23 (1666-1667): 415-419. 3. Imperial Vulnerability J.Z. Holwell, A Genuine Narrative of the Deplorable Deaths of the English Gentlemen, and Others, Who Were Suffocated in the Black-Hole in Fort William, in Calcutta, in the Kingdom of Bengal; in the Night Succeeding the 20th Day of June, 1756, 1758. 4. Imperial Cartography James Rennell, Memoir of a Map of Hindoostan, 1788. 5. Imperial Eyewitnessing Joseph Wilson, 'The Custom of Women Burning Themselves With Their Husbands', 1788. 6. Imperial Literary William Jones, Sacontalá or The Fatal Ring, 1789. 7. Imperial Education T.B. Macaulay, 'Minute [on Indian Education]', 2 February 1835. 8. Imperial Control W.H. Sleeman, Thugs or, Phansigars of India, 1839. 9. Imperial Domesticity Flora Annie Steel and Grace Gardiner, The Complete Indian Housekeeper & Cook, 1888. 10. Imperial Ethnography Herbert Risley, The People of India, 1908. Bibliography About the Author
Prefatory Note Introduction Acknowledgements 1. Imperial Business Charter Granted by Queen Elizabeth, to the Governor and Company of Merchants of London, Trading Into the East Indies, Dated the 31st December, in the 43rd Year of Her Reign, Anno Domini, 1600. 2. Imperial Prospecting Robert Boyle, 'Inquiries for Suratte and Other Parts of the East-Indies', Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 2. 23 (1666-1667): 415-419. 3. Imperial Vulnerability J.Z. Holwell, A Genuine Narrative of the Deplorable Deaths of the English Gentlemen, and Others, Who Were Suffocated in the Black-Hole in Fort William, in Calcutta, in the Kingdom of Bengal; in the Night Succeeding the 20th Day of June, 1756, 1758. 4. Imperial Cartography James Rennell, Memoir of a Map of Hindoostan, 1788. 5. Imperial Eyewitnessing Joseph Wilson, 'The Custom of Women Burning Themselves With Their Husbands', 1788. 6. Imperial Literary William Jones, Sacontalá or The Fatal Ring, 1789. 7. Imperial Education T.B. Macaulay, 'Minute [on Indian Education]', 2 February 1835. 8. Imperial Control W.H. Sleeman, Thugs or, Phansigars of India, 1839. 9. Imperial Domesticity Flora Annie Steel and Grace Gardiner, The Complete Indian Housekeeper & Cook, 1888. 10. Imperial Ethnography Herbert Risley, The People of India, 1908. Bibliography About the Author
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