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ID166882
Title ProperAnimal Labourers and the Law in Colonial India
LanguageENG
AuthorChhabra, Heeral
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article is a tentative effort to highlight the symbiotic but systematically underrated position of animals in labour history. It argues for an expansion of human-centric definitions of labour to include non-human animals in this domain. The discussion focuses in later parts on colonial rule in India to examine debates about three colonial legislative enactments dealing with animals as labouring bodies in various capacities. Predictably, this colonial discourse and intervention remains human-centric, too. Yet, closer reading of such historical evidence also indicates exciting scope for developing various aspects of the ‘animal question’ in relation to labour history and South Asian studies.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia Research 2019-06 39, 2; Jul 2019: p.166-183
Journal SourceSouth Asia Research 2019-06 39, 2
Key WordsColonialism ;  India ;  Marxism ;  Labour ;  Animals ;  History