Beyond Indenture -

Beyond Indenture

Agency and Resistance in the Colonial South Asian Diaspora

Crispin Bates (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
412 Seiten
2024
Cambridge University Press (Verlag)
978-1-009-33979-7 (ISBN)
124,70 inkl. MwSt
Examines the viewpoints and voices of indentured Indians who exercised agency, resisted and manipulated the colonial labour system to their advantage, and went on to build new lives for themselves overseas following the expiration of their contracts. It studies the role of women and their struggles for rights, freedom and opportunities.
Beyond Indenture brings together original essays by a mix of experienced and upcoming scholars. They reflect, as far as possible, the viewpoints and voices of indentured Indians who exercised agency, resisted and manipulated the colonial labour system to their advantage, and went on to build new lives for themselves overseas following the expiry of their contracts. Some remigrated to other colonies to earn a better wage and escape from debt and other burdens. Among those who chose to remain, women played a prominent role in the struggle for rights, freedom and opportunities, achieving them in ways which often defied or redefined South Asian customs and traditions. Alongside the migrant labourers, 'passenger Indians' made their way to the sugar, tea and rubber colonies, and became clerks, teachers and shopkeepers. After independence, the Indian communities overseas faced newer problems, not least of which were discrimination and marginalisation. Some were forced to return home. Others built upon the experience of struggles in the colonial era to collectively mobilise. Another theme explored is that of the broad alliances of diasporic Indians and Pakistani and Bangladeshi migrants who have been recently enabled by the internet to connect with each other and to reconnect with the countries from which they originated.

Crispin Bates is Professor of Modern and Contemporary South Asian History at the University of Edinburgh and Honorary Visiting Professor in the Graduate School of African and Asian Studies, Kyoto University. He has authored, coauthored and edited a total of 15 books including a history of South Asia from 1600 to the present, entitled Subalterns and Raj (2007), and a series of seven volumes concerning the history of the Indian uprising of 1857, entitled 'Mutiny at the Margins' (2013–2017). In 2015–2018, he led 'Becoming Coolies', an Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)–funded project on the origins of Indian overseas labour migration in the Indian Ocean, for which he conducted research in archives throughout the Indian Ocean region.

Introduction Crispin Bates; Part I. Agency and Resistance: 1. Negotiating Power in Colonial Natal: Indentured Migrants in Natal, 1860–1911 Goolam Vahed; 2. Stewed Plums, Baked Porridge and Flavoured Tea: Poisoning by Indian Domestic Servants in Colonial Natal Prinisha Badassy; 3. Labour Resistance in Indenture Plantations in the Assam Valley Rana Pratap Behal; 4. A Forgotten Narrative of the Satyagraha Campaign: The Treatment of Prisoners between 1907 and 1914 Kalpana Hiralal; 5. Toilers across the Seas: Racial Discrimination and Political Assertion among Sikhs in Canada Chhanda Chatterjee; Part II. Remigration: 6. The Remigration of Hindostanis from Surinam to India, 1878–1921 Chan E. S. Choenni; 7. Not So Anchored: The Remigration of Indians within the Caribbean Region Lomarsh Roopnarine; 8. On the Move: Remigration in the Indian Ocean, 1850–1906 Yoshina Hurgobin; Part III. Gender and Family: 9. Intimate Lives on Rubber Plantations: The Textures of Indian Coolie Relations in British Malaya Arunima Datta; 10. Labouring under the Law: Exploring the Agency of Indian Women under Indenture in Colonial Natal, 1860–1911 Nafisa Essop Sheik; 11. Gujarati 'Passenger Indians' in the Eastern Cape since 1900: Business, Mobility, Caste and Community Sheetal Bhoola; 12. The Eurasian Female Workforce and Imperial Britain: Harnessing Domestic Labour by People of Mixed Racial Descent Rochelle Almeida; Part IV. Legacies: 13. After the Long March: Colonial-Era 'Relief ' for Burma Indian Evacuees in Visakhapatnam District, 1942–1948 Emma C. Meyer; 14. Opposing the Group Areas Act and Resisting Forced Displacement in Durban, South Africa Brij Maharaj; 15. Indo-Fijians: From Agency to Abjection Brij V. Lal; 16. New and Old Diasporas of South–South Asia: Sri Lanka and Cyber-Nationalism in Malaysia Darini Rajasingham-Senanayake.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 30.6.2024
Reihe/Serie Global South Asians
Zusatzinfo Worked examples or Exercises
Verlagsort Cambridge
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Neuzeit (bis 1918)
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Wirtschaftsgeschichte
ISBN-10 1-009-33979-6 / 1009339796
ISBN-13 978-1-009-33979-7 / 9781009339797
Zustand Neuware
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