《绅士与侦探的成长:来自殖民大都会的犯罪、体面与监视故事》

Pub Date : 2023-08-07 DOI:10.1093/jsh/shad035
Anindita Ghosh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Priyanath Mukhopadhyay(后来也被称为PM)在加尔各答的殖民地警察部队度过了非凡的职业生涯,1878年至1911年,他在那里担任侦探。在他后来的生活中,他以一名巴德拉洛克人和一名侦探的身份写作——这两个都是他塑造的自我身份的重要组成部分——用犯罪叙事来展示他罕见的专业知识和他作为一名有文化的法律维护者的责任。通过对普里亚纳特连载的警察故事的研究,我们可以看到犯罪写作是如何锻造了受人尊敬和公民情感的价值观,并塑造了一个似乎正在分崩离析的城市社会的道德纤维。从首相的著作中可以追溯到殖民地加尔各答的犯罪活动,我们可以看到这座城市正因其物质财富、社会愿望和道德态度而重新排序。首相的故事试图通过在精心调整的殖民秩序中树立道德权威来应对这一挑战。他的读者显然也对此投入了资金,因为他们用钱包支持这一立场,导致发行量飙升。加尔各答的中产阶级在这些故事中成为普里亚纳特治安的一部分,提供社区和社区监控网络,并支持他们的侦探英雄的努力。作为一名社会评论员和警察,首相写了很多文章,重申了传统的社会和家庭价值观,并对违反阶级和性别界限表示不满。同样鲜活的是城市本身——犯罪暴露或隐藏的空间——文字提供了对城市知识和信息网络不同地形的访问。
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The Making of a Gentleman and a Detective: Tales of Crime, Respectability, and Surveillance from a Colonial Metropolis
Priyanath Mukhopadhyay (also referred to as PM subsequently) enjoyed an extraordinary career in the colonial police force in Calcutta, where he served as a detective from 1878 to 1911. In his later life, he wrote as a bhadralok and a detective—both important parts of his fashioned self-identity—using narratives of crime to showcase his rare professional expertise and his responsibilities as a cultured upholder of the law. Through an examination of Priyanath’s serialized police tales, it is possible to see how crime writing forged the values of respectability and civic sensibilities, and shaped the moral fiber of an urban society that appeared to be falling apart at its seams. Examining criminal activities in colonial Calcutta as recoverable from PM’s writings affords glimpses of a city being reordered by its material wealth, social aspirations, and moral attitudes. PM’s tales attempt to face this challenge by forging a moral authority in the finely calibrated colonial order. His readers too were evidently invested in it as they endorsed this stand with their purse, leading to soaring circulation figures. The middle classes of Calcutta emerge in these tales as part and parcel of Priyanath’s policing, providing neighborhood and community surveillance networks and backing up the efforts of their detective hero. PM wrote very much as a social commentator as well as a police officer, reaffirming traditional social and domestic values, and frowning upon transgression of class and gender boundaries. What also comes alive is the city itself—the spaces laid bare or concealed by crime—the writing providing access to different topographies of urban knowledge and information networks.
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