For the Record
On Sexuality and the Colonial Archive in India
Series: Next Wave: New Directions in Women's Studies;
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Product details:
- Publisher Duke University Press
- Date of Publication 15 September 2009
- Number of Volumes Cloth over boards
- ISBN 9780822345152
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages232 pages
- Size 235x156 mm
- Weight 467 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Long description:
The logic and the interpretive resources of For the Record arise out of two entangled and minoritized historiographies: one in South Asian studies and the other in queer/sexuality studies. Focusing on late colonial India, Arondekar examines the spectacularization of sexuality in anthropology, law, literature, and pornography from 1843 until 1920. By turning to materials and/or locations that are familiar to most scholars of queer and subaltern studies, Arondekar considers sexuality at the center of the colonial archive rather than at its margins. Each chapter addresses a form of archival loss, troped either in a language of disappearance or paucity, simulacrum or detritus: from Richard Burton’s missing report on male brothels in KarÁchi (1845) to a failed sodomy prosecution in Northern India, Queen Empress v. Khairati (1884), and from the ubiquitous India-rubber dildos found in colonial pornography of the mid-to-late nineteenth century to the archival detritus of Kipling’s stories about the Indian Mutiny of 1857.
Table of Contents:
Preface ix
Introduction. Without a Trace 1
1. A Secret Report: Richard Burton's Colonial Anthropology 27
2. Subject to Sodomy: The Case of Colonial India 67
3. Archival Attachments: The Story of an India-Rubber Dildo 97
4. In the Wake of 1857: Rudyard Kipling's Mutiny Papers 131
Coda. Passing Returns 171
Bibliography 181
Index 205