Becoming Imperial Citizens – Indians in the Late–Victorian Empire: Next Wave: New Directions in Women's Studies
Autor Sukanya Banerjeeen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 iun 2010
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822346081
ISBN-10: 0822346087
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 165 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Seria Next Wave: New Directions in Women's Studies
ISBN-10: 0822346087
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 165 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Seria Next Wave: New Directions in Women's Studies
Recenzii
Becoming Imperial Citizens is a virtuoso performance. It is written with verve, confidence, and elegance, and it is based on immense scholarship. Sukanya Banerjees exploration of an elite native Indian politics that preceded the anticolonial nationalist movement shows how citizenship can be (and has been) located outside the frame of the (free) nation. This compelling and important argument is bound to affect thinking in many fields including political theory, colonial history, and postcolonial and feminist studies.--Rajeswari Sunder Rajan, author of The Scandal of the State: Women, Law, Citizenship in Postcolonial India
There is no refusing Sukanya Banerjees very persuasive argument about the importance of studying the complexities of citizenship prior to the arrival of nationhood. Where previous scholarship has seen only the obsequious colonial subject, Banerjee discloses an early-twentieth-century, transnationally constituted, and carefully honed political, professional, and personal identity: that of the imperial citizen. This is an outstanding, extremely well-written book, with a prodigious amount of new archival research and a clear line of argument from start to finish.--Rosemary M. George, author of The Politics of Home: Postcolonial Relocations and Twentieth-Century Fiction
What is most valuable about Becoming Imperial Citizens is Sukanya Banerjees attention to formulations of citizenship other than that of the normative, rights-bearing citizen of the nation-state. Banerjee examines how differently positioned subjects of the colonial state conceived of themselves as citizens of the British Empire, and the kinds of belonging they enacted despite being denied the benefits of official, full citizenship. She also makes the valuable and vital linkages between imperial citizenship and diasporic belongings, thereby bringing colonial and postcolonial histories into conversations with questions of globalization.--Inderpal Grewal, author of Transnational America: Feminisms, Diasporas, Neoliberalisms
This is an elegantly-written and well-constructed book. . . . Banerjees book, forming part of the Next Wave: New Directions in Womens Studies series, will appeal to readers interested in gaining an insight into the interconnected, shifting, and at times conflicting, social, cultural, political and economic trends and ideological debates that marked the trajectory of late-Victorian imperialism. Troy Downs, South Asia
Becoming Imperial Citizens is a great resource for anybody studying the British Colonial Regimes legal, social, or political history. The struggle for equal status in daily living is not specific to India, but experienced by all former British colonies. When taking action against the government, it took inspirational actions to gradually tear down racial, class, and gender obstacles to citizenship for all.Nicolette Westfall, Elevate Difference
[Banerjee] offers both a theoretical corrective to the erasures and elisions of nationalist histories and a thicker account of Indian civil society, in all its global reach and complexity, in the waning years of empire. . . . Becoming Imperial Citizens makes valuable contributions to the fields of postcolonial historiography, social and political theory, and the literary and cultural history of South Asia. Scholars of nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Britain and the empire more generally will also find much here to extend and complicate existing research in their fields.Zak Sitter, Review 19
"Becoming Imperial Citizens is a virtuoso performance. It is written with verve, confidence, and elegance, and it is based on immense scholarship. Sukanya Banerjee's exploration of an elite native Indian politics that preceded the anticolonial nationalist movement shows how citizenship can be (and has been) located outside the frame of the (free) nation. This compelling and important argument is bound to affect thinking in many fields including political theory, colonial history, and postcolonial and feminist studies."--Rajeswari Sunder Rajan, author of The Scandal of the State: Women, Law, Citizenship in Postcolonial India "There is no refusing Sukanya Banerjee's very persuasive argument about the importance of studying the complexities of citizenship prior to the arrival of nationhood. Where previous scholarship has seen only the obsequious colonial subject, Banerjee discloses an early-twentieth-century, transnationally constituted, and carefully honed political, professional, and personal identity: that of the imperial citizen. This is an outstanding, extremely well-written book, with a prodigious amount of new archival research and a clear line of argument from start to finish."--Rosemary M. George, author of The Politics of Home: Postcolonial Relocations and Twentieth-Century Fiction "What is most valuable about Becoming Imperial Citizens is Sukanya Banerjee's attention to formulations of citizenship other than that of the normative, rights-bearing citizen of the nation-state. Banerjee examines how differently positioned subjects of the colonial state conceived of themselves as citizens of the British Empire, and the kinds of belonging they enacted despite being denied the benefits of official, full citizenship. She also makes the valuable and vital linkages between imperial citizenship and diasporic belongings, thereby bringing colonial and postcolonial histories into conversations with questions of globalization."--Inderpal Grewal, author of Transnational America: Feminisms, Diasporas, Neoliberalisms "This is an elegantly-written and well-constructed book... Banerjee's book, forming part of the Next Wave: New Directions in Women's Studies series, will appeal to readers interested in gaining an insight into the interconnected, shifting, and at times conflicting, social, cultural, political and economic trends and ideological debates that marked the trajectory of late-Victorian imperialism." - Troy Downs, South Asia "Becoming Imperial Citizens is a great resource for anybody studying the British Colonial Regime's legal, social, or political history. The struggle for equal status in daily living is not specific to India, but experienced by all former British colonies. When taking action against the government, it took inspirational actions to gradually tear down racial, class, and gender obstacles to citizenship for all." - Nicolette Westfall, Elevate Difference "[Banerjee] offers both a theoretical corrective to the erasures and elisions of nationalist histories and a thicker account of Indian civil society, in all its global reach and complexity, in the waning years of empire... Becoming Imperial Citizens makes valuable contributions to the fields of postcolonial historiography, social and political theory, and the literary and cultural history of South Asia. Scholars of nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Britain and the empire more generally will also find much here to extend and complicate existing research in their fields." - Zak Sitter, Review 19
There is no refusing Sukanya Banerjees very persuasive argument about the importance of studying the complexities of citizenship prior to the arrival of nationhood. Where previous scholarship has seen only the obsequious colonial subject, Banerjee discloses an early-twentieth-century, transnationally constituted, and carefully honed political, professional, and personal identity: that of the imperial citizen. This is an outstanding, extremely well-written book, with a prodigious amount of new archival research and a clear line of argument from start to finish.--Rosemary M. George, author of The Politics of Home: Postcolonial Relocations and Twentieth-Century Fiction
What is most valuable about Becoming Imperial Citizens is Sukanya Banerjees attention to formulations of citizenship other than that of the normative, rights-bearing citizen of the nation-state. Banerjee examines how differently positioned subjects of the colonial state conceived of themselves as citizens of the British Empire, and the kinds of belonging they enacted despite being denied the benefits of official, full citizenship. She also makes the valuable and vital linkages between imperial citizenship and diasporic belongings, thereby bringing colonial and postcolonial histories into conversations with questions of globalization.--Inderpal Grewal, author of Transnational America: Feminisms, Diasporas, Neoliberalisms
This is an elegantly-written and well-constructed book. . . . Banerjees book, forming part of the Next Wave: New Directions in Womens Studies series, will appeal to readers interested in gaining an insight into the interconnected, shifting, and at times conflicting, social, cultural, political and economic trends and ideological debates that marked the trajectory of late-Victorian imperialism. Troy Downs, South Asia
Becoming Imperial Citizens is a great resource for anybody studying the British Colonial Regimes legal, social, or political history. The struggle for equal status in daily living is not specific to India, but experienced by all former British colonies. When taking action against the government, it took inspirational actions to gradually tear down racial, class, and gender obstacles to citizenship for all.Nicolette Westfall, Elevate Difference
[Banerjee] offers both a theoretical corrective to the erasures and elisions of nationalist histories and a thicker account of Indian civil society, in all its global reach and complexity, in the waning years of empire. . . . Becoming Imperial Citizens makes valuable contributions to the fields of postcolonial historiography, social and political theory, and the literary and cultural history of South Asia. Scholars of nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Britain and the empire more generally will also find much here to extend and complicate existing research in their fields.Zak Sitter, Review 19
"Becoming Imperial Citizens is a virtuoso performance. It is written with verve, confidence, and elegance, and it is based on immense scholarship. Sukanya Banerjee's exploration of an elite native Indian politics that preceded the anticolonial nationalist movement shows how citizenship can be (and has been) located outside the frame of the (free) nation. This compelling and important argument is bound to affect thinking in many fields including political theory, colonial history, and postcolonial and feminist studies."--Rajeswari Sunder Rajan, author of The Scandal of the State: Women, Law, Citizenship in Postcolonial India "There is no refusing Sukanya Banerjee's very persuasive argument about the importance of studying the complexities of citizenship prior to the arrival of nationhood. Where previous scholarship has seen only the obsequious colonial subject, Banerjee discloses an early-twentieth-century, transnationally constituted, and carefully honed political, professional, and personal identity: that of the imperial citizen. This is an outstanding, extremely well-written book, with a prodigious amount of new archival research and a clear line of argument from start to finish."--Rosemary M. George, author of The Politics of Home: Postcolonial Relocations and Twentieth-Century Fiction "What is most valuable about Becoming Imperial Citizens is Sukanya Banerjee's attention to formulations of citizenship other than that of the normative, rights-bearing citizen of the nation-state. Banerjee examines how differently positioned subjects of the colonial state conceived of themselves as citizens of the British Empire, and the kinds of belonging they enacted despite being denied the benefits of official, full citizenship. She also makes the valuable and vital linkages between imperial citizenship and diasporic belongings, thereby bringing colonial and postcolonial histories into conversations with questions of globalization."--Inderpal Grewal, author of Transnational America: Feminisms, Diasporas, Neoliberalisms "This is an elegantly-written and well-constructed book... Banerjee's book, forming part of the Next Wave: New Directions in Women's Studies series, will appeal to readers interested in gaining an insight into the interconnected, shifting, and at times conflicting, social, cultural, political and economic trends and ideological debates that marked the trajectory of late-Victorian imperialism." - Troy Downs, South Asia "Becoming Imperial Citizens is a great resource for anybody studying the British Colonial Regime's legal, social, or political history. The struggle for equal status in daily living is not specific to India, but experienced by all former British colonies. When taking action against the government, it took inspirational actions to gradually tear down racial, class, and gender obstacles to citizenship for all." - Nicolette Westfall, Elevate Difference "[Banerjee] offers both a theoretical corrective to the erasures and elisions of nationalist histories and a thicker account of Indian civil society, in all its global reach and complexity, in the waning years of empire... Becoming Imperial Citizens makes valuable contributions to the fields of postcolonial historiography, social and political theory, and the literary and cultural history of South Asia. Scholars of nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Britain and the empire more generally will also find much here to extend and complicate existing research in their fields." - Zak Sitter, Review 19
Notă biografică
Textul de pe ultima copertă
"What is most valuable about "Becoming Imperial Citizens" is Sukanya Banerjee's attention to formulations of citizenship other than that of the normative, rights-bearing citizen of the nation-state. Banerjee examines how differently positioned subjects of the colonial state conceived of themselves as citizens of the British Empire, and the kinds of belonging they enacted despite being denied the benefits of official, full citizenship. She also makes the valuable and vital linkages between imperial citizenship and diasporic belongings, thereby bringing colonial and postcolonial histories into conversations with questions of globalization."--Inderpal Grewal, author of" Transnational America: Feminisms, Diasporas, Neoliberalisms"
Descriere
Examines colonial citizenship in late 19th and early 20th century India through the study of four public figures who helped formulate and challenge notions of national belonging in the midst of empire.