Becoming Visible: Travel Documents and Travelling Ayahs in the British Empire

IF 0.5 0 ASIAN STUDIES South Asian Studies Pub Date : 2022-07-03 DOI:10.1080/02666030.2022.2111087
A. Datta
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Abstract

This article explores the lives of Indian travelling ayahs (nannies and servants), who are usually hard to find in the historical records of the imperial state, using travel documents, such as ships’ manifests, passage slips, passage permissions and most significantly passports. Passports have recently been studied as sites of colonial and anti-colonial politics. This article puts passports and other travel documents to a different use, exploring the way they expose fleeting voices and choices in personal representation (in those documents) which reveal elements of the identities, experiences and agency of these colonised subjects. The central argument of this article is that, whilst travel documents, particularly passports were hegemonic documents, created as means of surveillance which enabled discrimination between coloniser and colonised, they also compelled colonial administrators to recognise and even humanise certain subaltern subjects, whose individual identities had often been erased in other documents. In an archival context wherein written and visual records left by travelling ayahs are scarce, this article thus also highlights the value of surviving passports for historians in re-visioning the histories of subaltern subjects.
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变得可见:大英帝国的旅行证件和旅行阿雅
这篇文章探讨了印度旅行保姆(保姆和仆人)的生活,他们通常很难在帝国的历史记录中找到,使用旅行证件,如船舶舱单,通行证,通行许可,最重要的是护照。护照最近被研究为殖民和反殖民政治的场所。这篇文章将护照和其他旅行证件用于不同的用途,探索它们如何暴露个人代表(在这些文件中)的短暂声音和选择,这些声音和选择揭示了这些被殖民主体的身份、经历和代理的元素。本文的中心论点是,虽然旅行证件,特别是护照是霸权证件,作为监视手段,使殖民者和被殖民者之间的歧视成为可能,但它们也迫使殖民管理者承认甚至人性化某些次等主体,他们的个人身份往往在其他文件中被抹去。在档案背景下,旅行的丫鬟留下的书面和视觉记录很少,因此,本文也强调了幸存的护照对历史学家重新审视次等臣民的历史的价值。
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来源期刊
South Asian Studies
South Asian Studies ASIAN STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
4.00%
发文量
0
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