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Item Details
Title: UNDER WESTERN EYES
INDIA FROM MILTON TO MACAULAY
By: Balachandra Rajan
Format: Paperback

List price: £23.99
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ISBN 10: 0822322986
ISBN 13: 9780822322986
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Publisher: DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pub. date: 1 April, 1999
Pages: 280
Description: Analysis of the consolidation of British imperialist discourse about India from the seventeenth century to the 1830s. This book tracks this imperial presence through a range of literary and ideological sites. It gives postcolonial thought a historical dimension and places literary history in a different perspective through postcolonial readings.
Synopsis: Spanning nearly two and a half centuries of English literature about India, Under Western Eyes traces the development of an imperial discourse that governed the English view of India well into the twentieth century. Narrating this history from its Reformation beginnings to its Victorian consolidation, Balachandra Rajan tracks this imperial presence through a wide range of literary and ideological sites. In so doing, he explores from a postcolonial vantage point collusions of gender, commerce, and empire-while revealing the tensions, self-deceptions, and conflicts at work within the English imperial design.Rajan begins with the Portuguese poet Camoes, whose poem celebrating Vasco da Gama's passage to India becomes, according to its eighteenth-century English translator, the epic of those who would possess India. He closely examines Milton's treatment of the Orient and Dryden's Aureng-Zebe, the first English literary work on an Indian subject. Texts by Shelley, Southey, Mill, and Macaulay, among others, come under careful scrutiny, as does Hegel's significant impact on English imperial discourse. Comparing the initial English representation of its actions in India (as a matter of commerce, not conquest) and its contemporaneous treatment of Ireland, Rajan exposes contradictions that shed new light on the English construction of a subaltern India.
Publication: US
Imprint: Duke University Press
Returns: Returnable
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