Militarized Masculinities: Shaped and Reshaped in Colonial South-East Punjab
This paper offers a gendered perspective to British domination in India through the British Indian Army—which in many ways was central to their entire structure of economic and political domination in India. Locating its understanding drawn from the political economy of south-east Punjab, it argues...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Modern Asian studies 2013-05, Vol.47 (3), p.713-750 |
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description | This paper offers a gendered perspective to British domination in India through the British Indian Army—which in many ways was central to their entire structure of economic and political domination in India. Locating its understanding drawn from the political economy of south-east Punjab, it argues that the designated martial castes and military recruitment structurally and ideologically identified with and privileged those trends of existing masculinities in this region which suited their power structure and empire building. It was a constellation of marital caste status, land ownership, dominant caste syndrome and good bodily physique or physical strength that ideologically came to connect and configure dominant masculinity in colonial Punjab. An Army profession fully supported it. During the two world wars it emerged as the militarized masculinity, amply supported by legal and administrative measures introduced or apparently adopted in deference to certain popular cultural practices. The associated economic and political privileges turned ‘loyalty’ into an inherent and special ingredient of ‘masculinity’ which the nationalists had to confront and deal with till such times that it came to be firmly linked with nationalism and patriotism. |
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subjects | Animal husbandry Armed Forces Army Asian history Breeding of animals Colonialism Consciousness Crops Cultural practices Dominance Empires Gender roles India Land Ownership Masculinity Men Nationalism Patriotism Popular culture Punjab Recruitment Social structure United Kingdom Women |
title | Militarized Masculinities: Shaped and Reshaped in Colonial South-East Punjab |
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