English Siege and Prison Writings

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1857 'Mutiny'
9th Lancers
Afghanistan
Agriculture
Ali Mahomed
Anglo-Mysore Wars
autobiographical writings
Bala Hissar
Birth Day
Black Hole
Bombay (Mumbai)
Bombay Establishment
British Camp
British colonial captivity primary sources
British imperial history
British Raj
Burma
Calcutta
Calcutta (Kolkata)
Captivity Narratives
Caste
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Ceylon
Christianity
Civilization
colonial captivity narratives
Colonial history
colonial trauma literature
Colony
diaries
East India Company
East Indies
English Captivity Narratives
Englishmen and women
Environment
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Fiction
Fine Day
Gender
General Havelock
Governance
Hinduism
Honourable East India Company
Hospitals
Ideology
imperial
incarceration
Islam
journals
Jurisprudence
Justice
Kind Attentions
King's Birth Day
King’s Birth Day
Lieutenant Colonel De
Madras (Chennai)
memoirs
Military
Pine Apples
Precariat Public Sphere
prison narratives
Prison Writings
prisoner of war accounts
Race
Red Field
Revolution
Rice
Settlement
siege
siege experience analysis
Slavery
South Asian conflict studies
subcontinent
Timber
Tippoo Saib
Trade
Unparalleled Sufferings
William Drake
Young Men
Zamindar

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138232686
  • Weight: 860g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Nov 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume brings together an unusual collection of British captivity writings – composed during and after imprisonment and in conditions of siege. Writings from the ‘Mutiny’ of 1857 are well known, but there exists a vast body of texts, from Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and Burma, and the Indian subcontinent, that have rarely been compiled or examined.

Written in anxiety and distress, or recalled with poignancy and anger, these siege narratives depict a very different Briton. A far cry from the triumphant conqueror, explorer or ruler, these texts give us the vulnerable, injured and frightened Englishman and woman who seek, in the most adverse of conditions, to retain a measure of stoicism and identity. From Robert Knox’s 17th-century account of imprisonment in Sri Lanka, through J. Z. Holwell’s famous account of the ‘Black Hole’ of Calcutta, through Florentia Sale’s Afghan memoir, and Lady Inglis’s ‘Mutiny’ diary from Lucknow, the book opens up a dark and revealing corner of the colonial archive.

Lucid and intriguing, this book will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of modern South Asia, colonial history, literary and culture studies.

Pramod K. Nayar teaches in the Department of English at the University of Hyderabad, India. His most recent books include The Indian Graphic Novel: Nation, History and Critique (Routledge, 2016), The Transnational in English Literature: Shakespeare to the Modern (Routledge, 2015), the edited Postcolonial Studies: An Anthology (2015) and the Postcolonial Studies Dictionary (2015). A book on human rights and literature and an edited five-volume collection Indian Travel Writing, 1830–1947 are forthcoming, besides essays on celebrity studies, graphic biographies and colonial etiquette books.