(2022). Doonstruck Diaries of Victorian Memsahibs: Between the Journal and Jhampaun in Mussoorie and Landour.ย Lectora,ย 27, 191-210.
Abstract
Established as colonial hill stations in India’s Doon Valley, in the 1820s, Mussoorie and Landour emerged in Victorian literary imagination with the journals of Emily Eden, Fanny Parks, and the Wallace-Dunlop sisters.ย This paper argues that the Doon’s female imperialย architexturesย invented new prospects of grafting Anglo-Saxon aesthetics onto the Himalayanย terra nulliusย , diminishing, miniaturizing, and depopulating aspects of the hazardous, the alien, and the local.ย A thread of archetypes โย jhampaunsย (Himalayan loco-armchairs) and Himalayan vistas โ link the aesthetic arcs in the journals of Eden, Parks, and the Wallace-Dunlops.ย Although theย architexture was ostensibly apolitical, it imbued the Doon’s representational spaces with a reproducible English character, rendering itsย terra incognitaย intoย terra familiarisย in imperial psyche, while carving a distinct imperial subjectivity for Memsahibs.
Keywords
Mussoorie; Landour; Architexture; Emily Eden; Fanny Parks; Doon Valley; Himalayas
