(2022). Mapping Icons of Victorian Femininity: Engendering London in Nineteenth-Century Indian Accounts. Interdisciplinary Literary Studies, 24 (3): 313-341.
Abstract
Indian travelers in Victorian London began engaging with questions of nationhood, modernity, family, home, and gender roles within the ambit of reproducing the cityโs imperial geography on increasingly gendered and sexist lines. The rise of Indian feminists like Sarojini Naidu, Cornelia Sorabji, Rukhmabai, and Princess Sophia notwithstanding, Indian men redrew Londonโs patriarchal contours. Drawing on a legacy of accounts by nineteenth-century Indian men, like T. N. Mukharji, Behramji Malabari, M. K. Gandhi, Lala Baijnath, T. B. Pandian, and G. P. Pillai, this article examines the maps of the geography of Victorian womanhood that they sought to reproduce. I argue thatโwhile colonial travelers helped India derive administrative, bureaucratic, and architectural modelsโthe geopolitical roots of postcolonial Indian patriarchy date back to ways in which an emotionally vulnerable Indian male gaze perceived Victorian Englishwomen. There is much to be troubled by the gendered relations that made imperial London and had an ominous afterlife in India, normalizing patriarchal expectations and codes of womanhoodโa social malignancy whose etiology stems from structures of Indiaโs colonial conflicts.
Keywords
Indians in London: Typogravia; Gender; Victorian Culture; Victoriana; Cornelia Sorabji; Rukhmabai; Sophia Duleep Singh; Sarojini Naidu
