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Gendered Transactions Indrani Sen

Gendered Transactions By Indrani Sen

Gendered Transactions by Indrani Sen


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Summary

Explores Indian gender issues through diverse sources including letters, memoirs, fiction, housekeeping manuals, and forgotten texts from the colonial archives.

Gendered Transactions Summary

Gendered Transactions: The White Woman in Colonial India, c. 1820-1930 by Indrani Sen

Gendered transactions seeks to capture the complex experience of the white woman in colonial India through an exploration of gendered interactions over the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It examines missionary and memsahibs' colonial writings, both literary and non-literary, probing their construction of Indian women of different classes and regions, such as zenana women, peasants, ayahs and wet-nurses.

Also examined are delineations of European female health issues in male authored colonial medical handbooks, which underline the misogyny undergirding this discourse. Giving voice to the Indian woman, this book also scrutinises the fiction of the first generation of western-educated Indian women who wrote in English, exploring their construction of white women and their negotiations with colonial modernities.

Gendered Transactions Reviews

'Sen combines her various research areas in the field ... from the perspective of gendered transactions over ... diverse topics such as missionary and civilizing mission by white women, social reform and women's education, English-speaking Literature of female actors and the complex relationships between British and Indian women and the memsahib. The various sources ... are remarkable... memoirs, letters, diaries, biographies, newspaper articles, novels, household manuals and medical guides. ... Sen makes an important contribution to the feminist historiography of colonial India by placing the diverse voices of European and Indian women at the center of their analysis.'
Manju Ludwig, Heidelberg, H.Soz. Cult (trans.)

'Sen's book has presented an extremely accessible account of white womens' experiences from the zenana to the colonial home to the barracks, all within an intricate web of gender, race and class relations.'
Zoya Sameen, University of Chicago, Social History

'Sen brings out a perspective that is often doubly neglected in writings on India: the voice of colonised women...Sen's research uses an impressively wide array of sources, which is particularly apparent in her work in the colonial archives digging up medical manuals available to colonial doctors, Sen demonstrates how resolutely imperial and prescriptive of women's roles they were...The analysis of these transactions is useful and revealing. Sen's work is a good reminder that white women in India did not work and live entirely separately from Indian life. They were also, crucially, not the only ones who were imagining the world around them, and Sen's work on 'Returning the 'gaze' across the racial divide is particularly welcome.'
James Watts, University of Bristol, Ex-Historia

'This excellent interdisciplinary study contributes to the fields of gender, literature, culture and social history of medicine in colonial India... a product of rigorous research of sources across genres... Sen's main aim is to provide fascinating, contradictory and multilayered constructions of white women in colonial India. She focuses on the complex experiences of three groups of such women, missionaries, memsahibs (middle-class white women, mostly administrators' wives) and, to a lesser extent, ordinary soldiers' wives... Sen's book skilfully tackles problematic questions about identity and agency in cross cultural encounters of white women in colonial India from various angles of gender, 'race', class, caste, region and religion.... The richness, cogency and clarity of the narrative is based on a thorough survey of literary and non-literary primary sources, as well as a wide range of secondary sources, to reveal the violence underlying initiatives of colonial modernity based on westernising and 'civilising missions' and 'ideals' of 'respectability' and well-being ... Gendered Transactions is not only invaluable for students with a literature and history background at undergraduate and postgraduate levels, but also a pleasurable and informative read for a wider audience.'
Ranjana Saha, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Mohali, India, South Asia Research Vol. 32 (2) July 2019

'Gendered Transactions is a unique contribution to the gendered dimension of empire and is a valuable addition to Sen's earlier studies.'
Shilpi Rajpal, Social Scientist, Vol 48, Nos. 3-6, March-June 2020

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About Indrani Sen

Indrani Sen is Associate Professor in the Department of English at Sri Venkateswara College, Delhi University

Table of Contents

Introduction
Part I: The white woman and the 'civilising mission'
1. The missionary 'gaze' and the 'civilising mission': zenana encounters in nineteenth-century Bengal
2. Flora Annie, social reform and female education in late nineteenth-century Punjab
3. Returning the 'gaze': colonial encounters in Indian women's English writings in late nineteenth-century western India
Part II: Colonial domesticity, white women's health and gender disadvantage
4. The ambivalences of power inside the colonial home: memsahibs, ayahs and wet nurses
5. Marginalising the memsahib: the white woman's health issues in colonial medical writings
6. The colonial 'female malady': European women's mental health and addiction in the late nineteenth century
Conclusion
Select bibliography
Index

Additional information

NLS9781526143488
9781526143488
1526143488
Gendered Transactions: The White Woman in Colonial India, c. 1820-1930 by Indrani Sen
New
Paperback
Manchester University Press
2019-09-10
240
N/A
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