东方服饰,帝国吸气:英国殖民文化中的印度胡卡

IF 0.5 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient Pub Date : 2022-02-18 DOI:10.1163/15685209-12341568
A. Chatterjee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在其英印职业生涯中,水烟最初是18世纪孟加拉殖民混合的原型,后来进入19世纪的伦敦,通过游记、水烟俱乐部、,印度风格的diwans和对东方文物的大量编目,最终在水晶宫展览(1851年)和殖民地和印度展览(1886年)中达到顶峰。胡卡同时出现在19世纪的回忆录、游记和绘画中,作为吸烟器具、装饰性手工艺品和过度殖民享受的视觉标志。水烟在19世纪殖民文化中的衰落被人们对其对道德和性规范的退化影响的普遍担忧所掩盖,早在其统治性结束之后。在其漫长的殖民生涯中,水烟象征着殖民地的混合性和超越其物质性的剩余帝国享受。无论是在英国还是印度,以水烟为象征的殖民杂糅都在非本地和不合时宜的英印空间中被虚拟化,从而标志着与东印度公司和帝国紧密交织在一起的强制性军国主义、经济和政治控制历史的显著偏离。
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Oriental Dressings, Imperial Inhalations: The Indian Hookah in British Colonial Culture
Over the course of its Anglo-Indian career, the hookah began as an archetype of colonial hybridity in eighteenth-century Bengal, before entering nineteenth-century London and its consumer sensorium as a seductive Oriental artefact, through travelogues, hookah clubs, Indian-styled diwans and a massive cataloguing of Eastern artefacts culminating in the Crystal Palace Exhibition (1851) and the Colonial and Indian Exhibition (1886). Hookahs appeared simultaneously as smoking instruments, decorative artefacts and visual signs of surplus colonial enjoyment in memoirs, travelogues and paintings from the long nineteenth century. The hookah’s decline in nineteenth-century colonial culture was camouflaged by general alarm over its degenerative effects on moral and sexual codes, well after its imperiality ran its course. In its long colonial career, the hookah symbolized colonial hybridity and surplus imperial enjoyment that surpassed its materiality. Whether in Britain or India, colonial hybridity, as symbolized by the hookah, was virtualized in nonlocal and anachronistic Anglo-Indian spaces, thus marking a remarkable digression from histories of coercive militarist, economic and political control that are so closely intertwined with the East India Company and Empire.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: The Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient (JESHO) publishes original research articles in Asian, Near, Middle Eastern and Mediterranean Studies across history. The journal promotes world history from Asian and Middle Eastern perspectives and it challenges scholars to integrate cultural and intellectual history with economic, social and political analysis. The editors of the journal invite both early-career and established scholars to present their explorations into new fields of research. JESHO encourages debate across disciplines in the humanities and the social sciences. Published since 1958, JESHO is the oldest and most respected journal in its field. Please note that JESHO will not accept books for review.
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