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UNDER THE RAJProstitution in Colonial Bengal A good read. [Sumanta] Banerjee moves through the century paying attention to British, bhadralok, and prostitutes as they interact, embrace, and collide. The subject is immensely complicated but in Banerjees hands, clearly explicated. Among the authors strengths is a mastery of a wide-range of nineteenth century Bengali sources from chapbooks and farces to colonial dispatches . . . Acomplex account of prostitution in nineteenth century Bengal. JOURNAL OF COLONIALISM AND COLONIAL HISTORY Remarkably well-informed and vivid . . . BUSINESS STANDARD (India) Banerjee explores the many changes that the profession of prostitution underwent in colonial Bengal . . . He provides a profusion of documentary evidence [and] recovers songs and sayings current among 19th century prostitutes. THE TELEGRAPH (India) Under the Raj explores the world of the prostitute, seeking to understand the culture of the trade and its impact on society, in the changing reality of nineteenth century Bengal. Sumanta Banerjee outlines the class structure that emerged within the profession, examines popular perceptions of prostitution and analyzes the complex relationship between the newly educated Bengali bhadralok society and the prostitute community. Banerjee gives voice to the prostitutes themselves, from which we hear their songs, letters, and writings, collected and reproduced from both oral tradition and printed sources. Questions of identity, autonomous space, collective consciousness and constructions of femininity and domesticity in marriage versus independence in prostitution are also addressed. In the process, Banerjee crafts a more supple and nuanced definition of the sociology of prostitution, moving beyond homogenizing or monolithic notions to reveal the diverse and often contradictory forces shaping commercial and social relations in colonial society. Prostitution in nineteenth century Bengal acquires relevance today as the heirs to this profession are themselves organizing in different parts of India to seek justice and demand rights, thus reviving the old debate over legalization or prohibition of their professional work. In Under the Raj, Sumanta Banerjee breaks new ground, situating prostitution in colonial Bengal at the intersection where different segments of the populationranging from British soldiers to Indian workersbriefly converged. Prologue 1. Introducing Phulmoni and Her
Sisters 2. British Sahibs and
Native Women
3. White Mars and Black
Venus 4. The Beshya and the
Babu
5. Voices from the Pit
6. The Burden of the
Bhadralok
7. Official Laws versus
Unofficial Needs Epilogue Notes Select Bibliography Index About the Author If you have any technical comments or suggestions, about this web site, please send e-mail to Our Webmaster at mrwebmaster@monthlyreview.org. |
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