ABSTRACT

This volume explores the intersections of diaspora and gender within the diasporic and Indian imagination. It investigates the ways in which race, class, caste, gender, and sexuality intersect with concepts of home, belonging, displacement and the reinvention of the nation and of self.

Positioning itself as a companion to Kala Pani Crossings: Revisiting 19th century Migrations from India’s Perspective (Routledge, 2021), the present book examines whether indentureship and diasporic locations marginalised women and men or empowered them; how negotiations or resistances have been determined by race, class, caste, or ethnicity; how traditional standards of Indianness and gender relations have been reshaped; how ideas of home, self and the nation have been impacted in the diaspora and in India after the 19th and early 20th century indentureship migration; and what 21st century Indians stand to gain by theorizing the legacy of 19th century indenture through a gender framework. To understand how fiction and non-fiction writers have negotiated the legacy of indentureship to create spaces where normative practices can be interrogated and challenged, the book gives pride of place to interviews with writers such as Cyril Dabydeen, Ananda Devi, Ramabai Espinet, Davina Ittoo, Brij Lal, Peggy Mohan, Shani Mootoo, and Khal Torabully.

Thus rooted in critical analyses but also in subjective and creative perspectives, this volume is a major intervention in understanding Indian indenture and its legacy in the diaspora and in India. It will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of literature, history, Indian Ocean studies, migration and South Asian studies.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Texts and Contexts: Rethinking Gender in Kala Pani Narratives

part I|48 pages

Rethinking the Kala Pani

chapter 1|14 pages

Revisiting Literary Studies of the Indian Diaspora

Possible Strategies for a Comparatist Approach

chapter 2|17 pages

‘The Sea is History’

The Concept of Space in Women's Kala Pani Crossings

chapter 3|15 pages

Women and Indenture

Revisiting Indian Discourses

part II|45 pages

Past and Present

chapter 4|13 pages

‘Intimate Violence’ 1 and the ‘Sexual Contract’ 2

Female Convicts and Marriage ‘System’ in Andamans, c. 1860–c. 1920

chapter 6|14 pages

Queer Diaspora and Hindu Rituals

Shani Mootoo's Moving Forward Sideways Like a Crab

part III|68 pages

Voice and Vision Redeemed

chapter 7|14 pages

Francophone Narratives of the Returnee

Epistemic Disobedience on Both Sides of the Kala Pani

chapter 8|16 pages

The Traces of the Silenced

Indian Indentured Women Labourers in Colonial Literature of Reunion

chapter 9|20 pages

Between Homes and Shores

Reimagining Her ‘Silences’ from Kala Pani Crossings in Indo-Caribbean Poetry

part IV|37 pages

In Conversation with India

chapter 11|15 pages

Popular Resolution of the Bhojpuri Women's Question

Examining the Socio-cultural Legacy of the Bidesiya in Select Bhojpuri Films

chapter 12|20 pages

Remembering Mariamman

part V|143 pages

In the Writers' Own Voices