Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
1. Placing Criminals, Displacing Thuggee: Historical Representation, "Fact," and Stereotype, c. 1830–2005.
2. How to Make a Thug: Recipes for Producing Crime, 1830–1910.
3. Discipline, Labor, Salvation: Repression, Reform, and the Thuggee Precedent.
4. Acting Like a Thief: From Aesthetics of Survival to the Politics of Liberation.
Notes.
Bibliography.
Index.
Henry Schwarz
The author is Associate Professor of English at Georgetown
University. He is author of Writing Cultural History in Colonial
and Postcolonial India (1997) and co-editor of Reading the Shape of
the World: Toward an International Cultural Studies (with Richard
Dienst, 1996) and of A Companion to Postcolonial Studies (with
Sangeeta Ray, Blackwell, 2000).
"Henry Schwarz's well researched account of the notions of crime and criminal communities given currency during the British colonial rule in India presents the whole spectrum of the darkest side of colonialism. His discussion of Budhan Theatre's intervention in this great human tragedy reaasures one that art still has a purpose in our time." Ganesh Devy, Founder, Dentified and Nomadic Tribes Rights Action Group "This book is an important contribution to studies of minority subjectivity, colonial discourse and social policy in India. Henry Schwarz, a literary and cultural critic of distinction, sustains an engaging dialogue between academic enquiry and socio-political activism. The lucid text invokes forms of subaltern performance to frame an interrogation of colonialist knowledge, as pertaining to the so-called De-Notified Tribes, in myriad historical and ideological contexts." Dr Daniel J. Rycroft, Lecturer in Asian Arts and Cultures, School of World Art Studies, University of East Anglia, Author of Representing Rebellion: visual aspects of counter-insurgency in colonial India (2006)
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