Maia Osorio, Victor Hugo and Teixeira Osorio, Marcelli Claudinni
Subjects
COLONIES, IMPERIALISM, INHERITANCE & succession, BRITISH colonies, BRITISH occupation of India, 1765-1947
Abstract
Copyright of Revista Ártemis: Estudos de Gênero, Feminismo e Sexualidades is the property of Revista Artemis and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
HISTORY of masculinity, COLONIES, IMPERIALISM, PATRIOTISM, MANNERS & customs -- Social aspects, INDIC castes, RECRUITING & enlistment (Armed Forces), GREAT Britain. Army. Indian Army, INDIAN economy, SOCIAL conditions in India, BRITISH occupation of India, 1765-1947, BRITISH military history, HISTORY
Abstract
This paper offers a gendered perspective to British domination in India through the British Indian Army—which in many ways was central to their entire structure of economic and political domination in India. Locating its understanding drawn from the political economy of south-east Punjab, it argues that the designated martial castes and military recruitment structurally and ideologically identified with and privileged those trends of existing masculinities in this region which suited their power structure and empire building. It was a constellation of marital caste status, land ownership, dominant caste syndrome and good bodily physique or physical strength that ideologically came to connect and configure dominant masculinity in colonial Punjab. An Army profession fully supported it. During the two world wars it emerged as the militarized masculinity, amply supported by legal and administrative measures introduced or apparently adopted in deference to certain popular cultural practices. The associated economic and political privileges turned ‘loyalty’ into an inherent and special ingredient of ‘masculinity’ which the nationalists had to confront and deal with till such times that it came to be firmly linked with nationalism and patriotism. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
PEASANTS, COLONIES, LOSS of consciousness, BRITISH occupation of India, 1765-1947, IMPERIALISM, SOVEREIGNTY, INSURGENCY
Abstract
This article studies two seismic decades in the history of the Garo community, marked out in colonial records as among the most violent and isolated people that British rule encountered in eastern and northeastern India. Through a densely knit historical narrative that hinges on an enquiry into the colonial reordering of the core elements of the regional political economy of eastern and northeastern India, it will train its focus on the figure of the rebellious Garo peasant and on the arresting display of Garo recalcitrance between 1807 and 1820. Reading a rich colonial archive closely and against the grain, the article will depart from extant historiography in its characterization of the colonial state in the early nineteenth century as well as of its relationship with 'tribes'/'peasants' in eastern and northeastern India. A critique of the idea of primitive violence and the production of the 'tribe' under conditions of colonial modernity will occupy the latter half of the article. Here it will argue that the numerous and apparently disparate acts of headhunting, raids, plunder, and burning by the Garos on the lowlands of Bengal and Assam were in fact an assembling of the first of a series of sustained peasant rebellions in this part of colonial India—a powerful manifestation of a community's historical consciousness of the loss of its sovereign self under British rule. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
TIGER hunting, COLONIES, IMPERIALISM, BRITISH occupation of India, 1765-1947
Abstract
The article discusses the symbolism of tiger hunting in the construction of British imperial and masculine identities during the nineteenth century in Colonial India. Tigers also represented for the British all that was wild and untamed in the Indian natural world. The British drew upon two powerful meanings, both linked with Indian kinship. British tiger hunting represented imperial domination not just India's politics but also its natural environment.