How the fictional representation of historical characters can serve to justify historical events and actions: Tipu Sultan’s Tiger

IF 0.5 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Rethinking History Pub Date : 2023-04-03 DOI:10.1080/13642529.2023.2203012
Ayesha Rafiq
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper is a comparative analysis of three nineteenth-century British novels – The Surgeon’s Daughter (1827) by Walter Scott; Tippoo Sultan: A Tale of the Mysore War (1840) by Philip Meadows Taylor; and The Tiger of Mysore (1895) by G.A. Henty – all of which feature Tipu Sultan, the Muslim ruler of the south Indian kingdom of Mysore, who used the tiger as his personal emblem, and was killed by the British and their allies on 4 May 1799. Previous scholarship on Tipu has mainly focused on the rationale behind his adoption of the tiger as his personal insignia which, among other things, stood for his fierce independence and military acumen. However, there is little discussion of the representation of Tipu’s tiger as an emblem in the literary tradition of the colonial power at that time or as an implied justification of its political ventures in the south of India reflected in the novels written after his death. This paper argues that these British novels subvert the emblematic significance of Tipu’s tiger through the use of tiger imagery, whose main thrust is to synonymize the savagery of the Indian tiger with the rulership of Tipu. To damage Tipu’s legacy, the tiger is portrayed both as formidable, with a morbid thirst for blood, and as vulnerable and weak. The study focuses on these variations, and suggests that Tipu’s fluctuating fictional images are influenced by the shifting British attitudes towards the Sultan during different periods of the East India Company’s rule. These novels were statements within the larger discourse of colonization whose enunciative context contributed to the process that reinforced Tipu’s status as a distinct menace to be solved by the colonial conquest.
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虚构的历史人物形象如何为历史事件和行动辩护:蒂普苏丹的老虎
本文对19世纪英国的三部小说进行了比较分析:沃尔特·斯科特的《外科医生的女儿》(1827);《蒂波苏丹:迈索尔战争的故事》(1840),菲利普·梅多斯·泰勒著;以及G.A.Henty的《迈索尔之虎》(1895年),所有这些都以南印度迈索尔王国的穆斯林统治者蒂普·苏丹为主角,他将老虎作为自己的个人徽章,并于1799年5月4日被英国及其盟友杀害。此前对蒂普的研究主要集中在他将老虎作为个人徽章背后的理由上,这代表了他强烈的独立性和军事敏锐性。然而,很少有人讨论将蒂普的老虎作为当时殖民大国文学传统中的象征,或作为其在印度南部政治冒险的隐含理由,反映在他去世后的小说中。本文认为,这些英国小说通过对虎意象的运用,颠覆了蒂普虎的象征意义,其主旨是将印度虎的野蛮与蒂普的统治同义。为了破坏蒂普的遗产,老虎被描绘成既可怕又病态地渴望鲜血,又脆弱无力。这项研究聚焦于这些变化,并表明蒂普波动的虚构形象受到了东印度公司统治不同时期英国人对苏丹态度转变的影响。这些小说是在更大的殖民话语中的陈述,其清晰的语境有助于强化蒂普作为一个需要通过殖民征服来解决的独特威胁的地位。
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来源期刊
Rethinking History
Rethinking History Multiple-
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: This acclaimed journal allows historians in a broad range of specialities to experiment with new ways of presenting and interpreting history. Rethinking History challenges the accepted ways of doing history and rethinks the traditional paradigms, providing a unique forum in which practitioners and theorists can debate and expand the boundaries of the discipline.
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