Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Foreword: Listening to a Gurkha Wife
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction – Bringing Gurkhas to Market: Race, Gender and Global Economies of Security Workforces
- 1 Colonial encounters, militarism and affect in global security
- 2 Bringing Martial Race to Market: Imperial Encounters, Militarism and the Making of Gurkhas
- 3 Locating Love in the Gurkha Security Package
- 4 The Happy Gurkha Housewife: Reproductive and Affective Labour in Global Security Households
- 5 Race, Gender and the Political Economy of Feeling Secure
- Conclusion – Slow Death and Failure in the Life Building of Gurkha Communities
- References
- Index
Foreword: Listening to a Gurkha Wife
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Foreword: Listening to a Gurkha Wife
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction – Bringing Gurkhas to Market: Race, Gender and Global Economies of Security Workforces
- 1 Colonial encounters, militarism and affect in global security
- 2 Bringing Martial Race to Market: Imperial Encounters, Militarism and the Making of Gurkhas
- 3 Locating Love in the Gurkha Security Package
- 4 The Happy Gurkha Housewife: Reproductive and Affective Labour in Global Security Households
- 5 Race, Gender and the Political Economy of Feeling Secure
- Conclusion – Slow Death and Failure in the Life Building of Gurkha Communities
- References
- Index
Summary
As I began reading Amanda Chisholm’s revealing book about the complex lives of the Nepali men who have become Gurkha security personnel and about the thinking women who are married to them, I thought of my father’s World War II photo albums. I paused in my reading and pulled out the albums, their bindings now crumbling, their dry onionskin page dividers crackling.
I turned the pages. The small black and white photographs were still intact. And there were Gurkha men looking back at me. They looked – or rather my father chose to take photos of them when they looked as my father wanted to remember them – stoic, determined, focused on their physical wartime tasks. The Gurkha men were short, compact, equipped with rifles, wearing their distinctive one-brim-up felt hats. They were carrying out tasks behind enemy lines in northern Burma. The year was 1943. In one photo, Gurkha men were standing at attention to greet a pith-helmeted senior British officer who had just flown in to fine-tune strategy. In another, Gurkhas were leading mules loaded with war-making supplies across an open field. In a third, Gurkha men were straining hard against ropes to drag an unmotored glider plane into position. Gliders were the innovative means by which the combined British, Australian and American unconventional units were secretly sending supplies ‘over the hump’ to allies in China.
As a young girl, the daughter of a World War II veteran, I absorbed my father’s admiring descriptions of the Gurkha men with whom he served. He told me of their loyalty and unflinching toughness. They were also, for him, honourable men. The Gurkhas became central figures in my father’s masculinised narrative of his war.
What Amanda Chisholm shows us here in these pages is that that admiration has become both a multigenerational asset and a burden for thousands of men from Nepal. It is a source of pride, yes. It is a militarised, racialised, masculinised ‘brand’ that is globally marketable, yes. But it is also a personal weight for a man to shoulder. Reading the chapters that follow, we come to understand that each individual, fallible Nepali man who gains entry into the Gurkhas must try to live up to the impossible expectations others have of a Gurkha.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Gendered and Colonial Lives of Gurkhas in Private SecurityFrom Military to Market, pp. ix - xiPublisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2022