
Becoming Imperial Citizens
Indians in the Late-Victorian Empire
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Becoming Imperial Citizens
Indians in the Late-Victorian Empire
About this book
Interpreting autobiography, fiction, election speeches, economic analyses, parliamentary documents, and government correspondence, Banerjee foregrounds the narrative logic sustaining the unprecedented claims to citizenship advanced by racialized colonial subjects. She focuses on the writings of figures such as Dadabhai Naoroji, known as the first Asian to be elected to the British Parliament; Surendranath Banerjea, among the earliest Indians admitted into the Indian Civil Service; Cornelia Sorabji, the first woman to study law in Oxford and the first woman lawyer in India; and Mohandas K. Gandhi, who lived in South Africa for nearly twenty-one years prior to his involvement in Indian nationalist politics. In her analysis of the unexpected registers through which they carved out a language of formal equality, Banerjee draws extensively from discussions in both late-colonial India and Victorian Britain on political economy, indentured labor, female professionalism, and bureaucratic modernity. Signaling the centrality of these discussions to the formulations of citizenship, Becoming Imperial Citizens discloses a vibrant transnational space of political action and subjecthood, and it sheds new light on the complex mutations of the category of citizenship.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Imperial Citizenship: Nation, Empire, Narrative
- 1. Of the Indian Economy and the English Polls
- 2. South Africa, Indentured Labor, and the Question of Credit
- 3. The Professional Citizen in/and the Zenana
- 4. Bureaucratic Modernity, the Indian Civil Service, and Grammars of Nationalism
- Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index