Gender, morality, and race in company India, 1765-1858
Material type: TextPublication details: New York Palgrave Macmillan 2011Description: xiii,250pISBN:- 9780230116931
- East India Company -- History
- British -- India -- History -- 18th century
- British -- India -- History -- 19th century
- British -- India -- Public opinion -- History -- 19th century
- Colonial administrators -- India -- History
- Imperialism -- Social aspects -- India -- History
- Masculinity -- Social aspects -- India -- History
- India -- Race relations
- India -- Moral conditions
- India -- Politics and government -- 1765-1947
- 954.031 22 SR-G
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 954.031 SR-G (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 124162 |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [213]-232) and index.
Colonial beginnings, ca. 1600-1793 -- Trying to rule India without Indians, 1793-1831 -- Honor, racial prestige, and gentlemen sepoys, 1757-ca. 1830 -- "If the natives were competent, from their moral qualities" : race, paternalism, and partial indianization, 1813-1857 -- Martial races, caste-ridden sepoys, and British fears of losing control : the British and their Indian armies in late Company India.
"Between 1765 and 1858, British imperialists in India obsessed continuously about gaining and preserving Indian "opinion" of British moral and racial prestige. Weaving political, intellectual, cultural, and gender history together in an innovative approach, Gender, morality, and race in Company India, 1765-1858 examines imperial anxieties regarding British moral misconduct in India ranging from debt and gift giving to drunkenness and irreligion and points out their wider relationship to the structuring of British colonialism. Showing a pervasive fear among imperial elites of losing "mastery" over India, as well as a deep distrust of Indian civil and military subordinates through whom they ruled, Sramek demonstrates how much of the British Raj's notable racial arrogance after 1858 can in fact be traced back into the preceding Company period of colonial rule. Rather than the Sepoy Rebellion of 1857 ushering in a more racist form of colonialism, this book powerfully suggests far greater continuity between the two periods of colonial rule than scholars have hitherto generally recognized"--
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