Indians and the Antipodes: Networks, Boundaries, and Circulation

Indians and the Antipodes: Networks, Boundaries, and Circulation

Indians and the Antipodes: Networks, Boundaries, and Circulation

Indians and the Antipodes: Networks, Boundaries, and Circulation

eBook

$41.49  $54.99 Save 25% Current price is $41.49, Original price is $54.99. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Indians now constitute a significant ethnic minority in Australia and New Zealand. According to the most recent census figures, they number slightly more than half a million, but represent a successful ethnic community making significant contributions to their host societies and economies. The histories of their migration go back to the early colonial period, but rarely do they find any space in the global literature on Indian diaspora, probably because of their small numbers. This book covers their history over the past two and half centuries, covering both the 'old' and the 'new' diaspora; the first group consisting of the labourers who migrated under pressure of colonial capital, and the second group representing the post-war professional migrants. But this book is not just about the diaspora, it also looks closely at the host societies which over this period have been receiving and interacting with these migrants. And it looks at a few Antipodeans too, who were going to India in the early twentieth century and making contributions in terms of ideas and service.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199093953
Publisher: OUP India
Publication date: 04/16/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Sekhar Bandyopadhyay, Professor, Asian History and Director of the New Zealand India Research Institute at Victoria University,Jane Buckingham, Professor, history at the University of Canterbury

Sekhar Bandyopadhyay is Professor of Asian History and Director of the New Zealand India Research Institute at Victoria University of Wellington. His primary research interest is in the history of nationalism and caste system in colonial and postcolonial India. He is also interested in the history of Indian migration and the Indian Diaspora. He has written seven books, edited or co-edited nine books, and published more than forty book chapters and journal articles. His most recent books are From Plassey to Partition and After: A History of Modern India (Second Edition, 2015) and (co-ed.) Religion and Modernity in India (2016). In 2009 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand. In 2014, for his book Decolonization in South Asia he was awarded Rabindra Puraskar.

Jane Buckingham teaches history at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand. She specialises in Indian history and has published in areas including medical and disability history, human/animal relations, business and

legal history. She is particularly interested in histories of health, migration and labour. She is the author of Leprosy in colonial south India: medicine and confinement (2002). Her most recent co-edited book is Conflict, negotiation, and coexistence: rethinking human-elephant relations in South Asia (2016).

Table of Contents

Introduction/ Sekhar Bandyopadhyay and Jane Buckingham
1. Identity and Invisibility: Early Indian Presence in Aotearoa New Zealand, 1769-1850/ Todd Nachowitz
2. Circuitous Routes: Journeys from India to Australia by way of the sugar colonies/ Margaret Allen
3. Naming Charlie: Inscribing British Indian Identities in White Australia, 1901-1940/Kama Maclean
4. Indian Migration to New Zealand in the 1920s: Deciphering the Immigration Restriction Amendment Act 1920/ Michael Roche and Sita Venkateswar
5. Totaram Sanadhya's Experience of Racism in early White Australia (a transcreated narrative)/Purushottama Bilimoria
6. 'Not as a Stranger or a Tourist': Leonora Gmeiner and the First Girls' School in Delhi/ Devleena Ghosh and Heather Goodall
7. 'Did you know your great grandmother was an Indian Princess?': Early Anglo-Indian arrivals in New Zealand/Robyn Andrews
8. 'A Rich Tapestry': The Life and Heritage of Sir Anand Satyanand/ Jacqueline Leckie
9. Class and Caste Consciousness: The Narratives of Indian Sub-continental Diaspora in Australia/Amit Sarwal 10. Negotiating Indianness: Auckland's Shifting Cultural Festivities/ Alison Booth?
About the Editors and Contributors
Index
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews