Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 0 x 0
978-0-7425-2936-6 • Hardback • May 2004 • $159.00 • (£123.00)
978-0-7425-7735-0 • eBook • May 2004 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
Judith E. Walsh is professor in the humanities and languages department at the State University of New York, the College at Old Westbury.
Chapter 1 Global Domesticity
Chapter 2 Domesticity in Colonial Calcutta
Chapter 3 Rewriting Patriarchy: The Companionate Marriage
Chapter 4 Will the Educated Woman Still Cook and Scour Plates?
Chapter 5 What's Love Got To Do with It?
Chapter 6 The Well-Ordered Home
Chapter 11 What Women Learned: Rewriting Patriarchy, Writing the Nation and the Self
Thoughtful and balanced—a very thorough job of impressive scholarship.....
— Gail Minault
Walsh makes a good case for how elite women's agency was involved in escaping from abuse and exploitation by their in-laws. Recommended.....
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Domesticity in Colonial India deals with women's reform in the late nineteenth-century colonial Calcutta. It traces the development of a reformist for women first promulgated by the Brahmo Samaj and gradually accepted by members of the English-educated, Bengali urban middle class known as bhadralok. Unlike other authors, Judith Walsh uses these findings to try to position women's reform in Bengal within a global domesticity produced reflexively in colony and metropole. This comparative approach to women's reform enhances the value of the book and opens up some interesting avenues for future research...
— Jennifer Dubrow
Judith Walsh's book adds to the scholarship on the re-shaping of gender roles in nineteenth-century Bengal by examining in detail a rarely discussed archive. Her English translations from this Bengali archive are valuable in their own right. Moreover, hercomparative approach is one of the most stimulating aspects of this volume and opens up interesting possibilities for future research focusing on other regions of India. Further, the global breadth makes the book suitable for assignment in non-area specific women's studies courses...
— Debali Mookerjea-Leonard
The book stimulates thought. Additionally this volume makes for an entertaining and lucid read. It should prove popular in undergraduate and graduate courses in Colonial Studies, Colonialism, Gender and Women's Studies as well as to the people who are just interested in the subject.
— Indrani Chatterjee