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South Asian Resistances in Britain, 1858 - 1947

Editat de Dr Sumita Mukherjee, Dr Rehana Ahmed
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 dec 2011
This volume offers an alternative way of conceiving the history of Britain by excavating and exploring the numerous ways in which South Asians in Britain engaged in radical discourse and political activism from 1858 to 1947, before their more permanent migration and settlement. The book focuses on a tumultuous period of resistance against the backdrop of high imperialism under the reign of Victoria, through the turmoil of two World Wars and Partition in 1947. As well as addressing resistances against empire and hierarchies of race, the authors investigate how South Asians in Britain mobilized to campaign for women's suffrage (the Indian princess Sophia Duleep Singh), for example, or for an international socialism (the Communist MP Shapurji Saklatvala), thereby contributing to and complicating notions of freedom, equality and justice.  This volume reframes these pioneers as social and political agents and activists and shows how Britain's contemporary multicultural society is rooted in their mobilization for equality of citizenship.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781441117564
ISBN-10: 1441117563
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

A significant text for courses in imperial history, postcolonial studies and south Asian studies

Notă biografică

Rehana Ahmed is Lecturer in English Studies at Teesside University, UK. She specialises in postcolonial literature.
Sumita Mukherjee is an historian of South Asia and the British Empire. She is the author of Nationalism, Education and Migrant Identities: The England-Returned (2009).

Cuprins

Introduction (Ahmed and Mukherjee) / Part I Violent Resistances / 1. Scholarship Terrorists: The India House Hostel and the 'Student Problem' in Edwardian London (Tickell) / 2. 'For Every O'Dwyer...there is a Shaheed Udham Singh': The Caxton Hall Assassination of Michael O'Dwyer (Stadtler) / Part II Working-Class Resistances / 3. Littoral Struggles, Liminal Lives: Indian Merchant Seafarers' Resistances (Wemyss) / 4. Ghulam Rasul's Travels: Migration, Recolonization and Resistance in Inter-War Britain (Tabili) / 5. Networks of Resistance: Krishna Menon and Working-Class South Asians in Inter-War Britain (Ahmed) / Part III Resistances and the Elite / 6. Royal Relationships as a Form of Resistance: The Cases of Duleep Singh and Abdul Karim (Wainwright) / 7. Herabai Tata and Sophia Duleep Singh: Suffragette Resistances for India and Britain 1910-20 (Mukherjee) / Part IV Cross-Cultural Resistances / 8. Metropolitan Resistance: Indo-Irish Connections in the Inter-War Period (O'Malley) / 9. Negotiating a 'New World Order': Mulk Raj Anand as Public Intellectual at the Heart of Empire 1925-45 (Nasta) / 10. Epilogue - Salaam, Great Britain: Thinking through Resistance in an Age of Global Empire (Burton). 

Recenzii

This fine volume engagingly reveals the experiences and aspirations of diverse South Asian men and women who lived and worked in Britain during the British Raj. Highlighting the varied nature of Asian resistance to racism and other forms of oppression, the editors and contributors present us with the latest insights and developments of the field.
All of the essays in this volume are thoroughly scholarly, well-written, and fascinating. They combine fresh and deep archival research with a clearly articulated analysis of their significance in the light of contemporary (then and now) contexts, and the book as a whole brings a significant new understanding of how various individuals, classes, and groups creatively and productively resisted British imperial culture and politics...This volume is an important intervention in historical and cultural scholarship about Britain and postcolonial studies.