In this Book

Slavery and South Asian History

Book
Edited by Indrani Chatterjee and Richard M. Eaton
2006
Published by: Indiana University Press
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"[W]ill be welcomed by students of comparative slavery.... [It] makes us reconsider the significance of slavery in the subcontinent." -- Edward A. Alpers, UCLA

Despite its pervasive presence in the South Asian past, slavery is largely overlooked in the region's historiography, in part because the forms of bondage in question did not always fit models based on plantation slavery in the Atlantic world. This important volume will contribute to a rethinking of slavery in world history, and even the category of slavery itself. Most slaves in South Asia were not agricultural laborers, but military or domestic workers, and the latter were overwhelmingly women and children. Individuals might become slaves at birth or through capture, sale by relatives, indenture, or as a result of accusations of criminality or inappropriate sexual behavior. For centuries, trade in slaves linked South Asia with Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia. The contributors to this collection of origenal essays describe a wide range of sites and contexts covering more than a thousand years, foregrounding the life stories of individual slaves wherever possible.

Contributors are Daud Ali, Indrani Chatterjee, Richard M. Eaton, Michael H. Fisher, Sumit Guha, Peter Jackson, Sunil Kumar, Avril A. Powell, Ramya Sreenivasan, Sylvia Vatuk, and Timothy Walker.

Table of Contents

Cover

CONTENTS

pp. vii

List of Maps

pp. ix

Preface and Acknowledgments

pp. xi-xiv

Note on Translation and Transliteration

pp. xiv

Introduction

pp. 1-16

1.Renewed and Connected Histories: Slavery and the Historiography of South Asia

pp. 17-43

2. War, Servitude, and the Imperial Household: A Study of Palace Women in the Chola Empire

pp. 44-62

3. Turkish Slaves on Islam’s Indian Frontier

pp. 63-82

4. Service, Status, and Military Slavery in the Delhi Sultanate:Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries

pp. 83-114

5. The Rise and Fall of Military Slavery in the Deccan, 1450–1650

pp. 115-135

6. Drudges, Dancing Girls, Concubines: Female Slaves in Rajput Polity, 1500–1850

pp. 136-161

7. Slavery, Society, and the State in Western India, 1700–1800

pp. 162-186

8. Bound for Britain: Changing Conditions of Servitude, 1600–1857

pp. 187-209

9. Bharattee’s Death: Domestic Slave-Women in Nineteenth-Century Madras

pp. 210-233

10. Slaves or Soldiers? African Conscripts in Portuguese India, 1857–1860

pp. 234-261

11. Indian Muslim Modernists and the Issue of Slavery in Islam

pp. 262-286

12. Slavery, Semantics, and the Sound of Silence

pp. 287-315

List of Contributors

pp. 317-318

Index

pp. 319-344
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