At the Heart of the Empire : Indians and the Colonial Encounter in Late-Victorian Britain/Antoinette Burton. 1998, xv, 278 p., $25. ISBN 81-215-0850-9.

Contents: 1. Introduction: Mapping a critical geography of late-nineteenth-century imperial Britain. 2. The vovage in. 3. "Restless desire": Pandita Ramabai at Cheltenham and wantage, 1883-86. 4. Cornelia Sorabji in Victorian Oxford. 5. A "Pilgrim Reformer" at the Heart of the Empire: Behramji Malabari in late-Victorian London. Epilogue. Notes. Bibliography. Index.

"In this innovative study, Antoinette Burton investigates the colonial empire through the eyes of the three of its Indian subjects. The first of these, Pandita Ramabai, arrived in London in 1883 to seek medical education. She left in 1886, having resisted the Anglican Church's attempts to make her an Evangelical Missionary, and began a career as a celebrated social reformer. Cornelia Sorabji went to Oxford to study law and became one of the first Indian women to be called to the bar. Already a well known Bombay journalist, Behramji Malabari traveled to London in 1890 to seek support for his social reform projects. All three felt the influence of imperial power keenly during even the most everyday encounters in Britain, and their extensive writings are conscious analyses of how "Englishness" was made and remade in relation to imperalism.

"The accounts of these three sojourners--all prominent, educated Indians--represent complex, critical ethnographies of "native" metropolitan society and offer revealing glimpses of what it was like to be a colonial subject in fin-de-siecle Britain. Burton argues that their movement to and through a variety of domestic landscapes helped to consolidate who was "Indian" and what counted as "Englishness" in the later nineteenth century--and that colonial subjects were part of the making of an imperial culture rather than passive slates upon whom the British empire could write its intentions.

"Written clearly and persuasively, this historical treatment of the colonial encounter challenges the myth of Britian's insularity from empire, demonstrating instead that the United Kingdom was a terrain open to content and refiguration." (jacket)

[Antonette Burton is Senior Lecturer in History and Associate Director of Women's Studies at John Hopkins University. She also wrote Burden of History: British Feminists, Indian Women and Imperial Culture.]

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