Empires of the Senses

Empires of the Senses

Author: Andrew Jon Rotter

Publisher:

Published: 2019

Total Pages: 393

ISBN-13: 0190924705

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A deeply researched study, this book offers the first sensory history of the British empire in India and the United States in the Philippines, reflecting on how senses structured the colonizers' perception of the colonized (and vice versa) and impacted the British and American imperial projects.


Days of the Raj

Days of the Raj

Author: Pramod K. Nayar

Publisher: Penguin Books India

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 155

ISBN-13: 014310280X

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British India generated the largest imperial archive in the world. From the stacks of administrative reports, minutes, instruction manuals, memoirs, letters, reports, cook-books and travelogues the British left behind,


English Writing and India, 1600–1920

English Writing and India, 1600–1920

Author: Pramod K. Nayar

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2008-03-25

Total Pages: 225

ISBN-13: 113413150X

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This book explores the formations and configurations of British colonial discourse on India through a reading of prose narratives of the 1600-1920 period. Arguing that colonial discourse often relied on aesthetic devices in order to describe and assert a degree of narrative control over Indian landscape, Pramod Nayar demonstrates how aesthetics furnished a vocabulary and representational modes for the British to construct particular images of India. Looking specifically at the aesthetic modes of the marvellous, the monstrous, the sublime, the picturesque and the luxuriant, Nayar marks the shift in the rhetoric – from the exploration narratives from the age of mercantile exploration to that of the ‘shikar’ memoirs of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century’s extreme exotic. English Writing and India provides an important new study of colonial aesthetics, even as it extends current scholarship on the modes of early British representations of new lands and cultures.