ABSTRACT

This book explores and re-evaluates Kipling’s connection with India, its people, culture, languages, and locales through his experiences and his writings. Kipling’s works attracted interest among a large section of the British public, stimulating curiosity in their far-off Indian Empire, and made many canonize him as an emblem of the ‘Raj’.

This volume highlights the astonishing social and thematic range of his Indian writings as represented in The Jungle Books; Kim; his early verse; his Simla-based tales of Anglo-Indian intrigues and love affairs; his stories of the common Indian people; and his journalism. It brings together different theoretical and contextual readings of Kipling to examine how his experience of India influenced his creative work and conversely how his imperial loyalties conditioned his creative engagement with India. The 18 chapters here engage with the complexities and contradictions in his writings and analyse the historical and political contexts in which he wrote them, and the contexts in which we read him now.

With well-known contributors from different parts of the world – including India, the UK, the USA, Canada, France, Japan, and New Zealand – this book will be of great interest not only to those interested in Kipling’s life and works but also to researchers and scholars of nineteenth-century literature, comparative studies, postcolonial and subaltern studies, colonial history, and cultural studies.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

The Kiplings and India

part I|78 pages

The Kiplings in India

chapter 1|16 pages

Alice Kipling as a Journalist

The Simla Season, 1892

chapter 2|15 pages

Paternal legacy

Lockwood Kipling and Rudyard Kipling

chapter 3|9 pages

Anglo-Indians in Kipling

Kipling in Simla

chapter 4|8 pages

“The City of Dreadful Night”

From Thomson’s Chronotope to Kipling’s Lahore

chapter 5|14 pages

Kipling in Allahabad

chapter 6|14 pages

Mind the gap

Hindi, Urdu, and Hindustani words in Kipling’s Kim

part II|108 pages

Rudyard Kipling’s Indian poetry and fiction

chapter 8|14 pages

Hard knocks and ‘The Vision of Hamid Ali’

Kipling’s Indian poetry

chapter 9|13 pages

On the edge

The conundrum of Kipling’s ambivalent fictions

chapter 10|13 pages

Through the lens of childhood

Kipling’s Claim to India

chapter 11|14 pages

Going native, cautiously

Colonial ambivalence in Rudyard Kipling’s Kim

chapter 12|13 pages

‘I have the Jâtaka; and I have thee’

Fables and Kipling’s political zoology

chapter 13|11 pages

Gender and genre in the Anglo-Indian romance

Reading Rudyard Kipling’s The Naulahka

part |50 pages

The Jungle Books

chapter 15|12 pages

Missing (Indian) mothers and itineraries

Reading The Jungle Book alongside psychoanalytic perspectives 1

chapter 16|12 pages

Kipling and Kaa[li]: via Kolkata

chapter 17|14 pages

Letting in the Jungle

Hospitality in Kipling