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ID141468
Title ProperThat unit of civilisation’ and ‘the talent peculiar to women
Other Title Information British employers and their servants in the nineteenth-century Indian empire
LanguageENG
AuthorDussart, Fae Ceridwen
Summary / Abstract (Note)Domestic servants across the British Empire were instrumental in constructing colonial domesticity. In metropole and colony, they marked the physical boundaries of the house and family and the categorical boundaries of class, gender and racial difference. However, in colonial India, the gender and racial status of Indian servants, relative to both their colonial employers and their metropolitan counterparts, disrupted the dynamics of dependence that structured metropolitan employer/servant relations and identities. Despite efforts to dutifully ‘civilise’ households according to a ‘British’ standard, the day-to-day reality was one in which ambivalence and uncertainty towards servants were commonplace among colonisers and where servants participated in the creation of a way of life that was specifically colonial, even while it sought to preserve and proselytise ‘Britishness’.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 22, No.6; Dec 2015: p.706-721
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 2015-12 22, 6
Key WordsColonialism ;  Race ;  India ;  Gender ;  Servant ;  Domesticity