‘The Purdahnashin in Her Setting’: Colonial Modernity and the Zenana in Cornelia Sorabji's Memoirs

Feminist Review 65 (1):145-158 (2000)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

This article focuses on two memoirs written by Cornelia Sorabji in the 1930s – India Calling (1934), and a subsequent book, India Recalled (1936) – in order to explore how discourses of space and place shaped the representations of femininity which structure these texts. Specifically, I will examine Sorabji's apprehensions of femininity in relation to the Muslim and Hindu women she viewed as her legal ‘clients.’ I am equally interested in these texts as evidence of how memory works as a practice of history – how events as they were recalled and recorded in the volatile 1930s and, especially in the wake of the Katherine Mayo controversy, how they helped shape the versions of the respectable feminine produced in her public writing of the period.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 92,497

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Aristotle on Memory: Second Edition.Richard Sorabji - 2006 - University of Chicago Press.
Ethnic War in Bosnia?Cornelia Sorabji - 1993 - Radical Philosophy 63.
SORABJI, R. Emotion and Peace of Mind.R. Sorabji, T. Brennan & P. Brown - 2002 - Philosophical Books 43 (3):169-220.
Emotions and Peace of Mind.Richard Sorabji - 2002 - Oxford University Press UK.
Learning to forget: the anti-memoirs of modernity.Dipankar Gupta - 2005 - New Delhi: Oxford University Press.
Richard Sorabji interview.James Garvey - 2013 - The Philosophers' Magazine 60 (60):66-74.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-11-24

Downloads
10 (#1,201,046)

6 months
9 (#320,673)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?