Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Glossary
- Some Prominent Figures in the British Parliament, the Abolitionist Movement and the East India Company
- Part I Other Slaveries
- Part II European Slaveries
- Part III Indian Slaveries
- Introduction: Locating Indian Slaveries
- 4 ‘This Household Servitude’: Domestic Slavery and Immoral Commerce
- 5 ‘Open and Professed Stealers of Children’: Slave-trafficking and the Boundaries of the Colonial State
- 6 ‘Slaves of the Soil’: Caste and Agricultural Slavery in South India
- Part IV Imagined Slaveries
- Conclusion: ‘Do Justice to India’: Abolitionists and Indian Slavery, 1839–1843
- Select Bibliography
- Index
5 - ‘Open and Professed Stealers of Children’: Slave-trafficking and the Boundaries of the Colonial State
from Part III - Indian Slaveries
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Glossary
- Some Prominent Figures in the British Parliament, the Abolitionist Movement and the East India Company
- Part I Other Slaveries
- Part II European Slaveries
- Part III Indian Slaveries
- Introduction: Locating Indian Slaveries
- 4 ‘This Household Servitude’: Domestic Slavery and Immoral Commerce
- 5 ‘Open and Professed Stealers of Children’: Slave-trafficking and the Boundaries of the Colonial State
- 6 ‘Slaves of the Soil’: Caste and Agricultural Slavery in South India
- Part IV Imagined Slaveries
- Conclusion: ‘Do Justice to India’: Abolitionists and Indian Slavery, 1839–1843
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Indrani Chatterjee has written that ‘arguments over territorial jurisdiction of law as well as “customary” social practices in the conduct of diplomatic relations between the British government of India and the “princely states” of the subcontinent constituted many different barriers to [the] delegalisation [of slavery].’ Colonial officials, she suggests, ‘tried to play the abolitionist card selectively’ and, as a result, the British residency system led to ‘few general prohibitions or proclamations against the land-based trade or the keeping of slaves’. This chapter explores these ideas further, arguing that although Chatterjee's assessment is accurate for domestic slavery when imagined as a static internal institution, where the land-based trade involved the coercive acquisition of slaves and the illegitimate movement of people across territorial boundaries, it exercised significant British attention, being subsumed into wider colonial conceptions of criminality, itinerancy and stability. It will use the example of the debates that took place over slave-trading between the Rajput and Maratha states and British India to explore the various political, ideological and ‘moral’ imperatives that informed British officials' attitudes towards slavery and slave-trading in India. In particular it will look at the implications of these debates for our understanding of the limits of British ‘authority’, using the example of illegally procured slaves to demonstrate the fluid manner in which individuals could move, or be moved, between British and Indian controlled spaces, physically and metaphorically, and the extent to which British influence was in practice limited, both spatially and ideologically.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Slavery, Abolitionism and Empire in India, 1772–1843 , pp. 163 - 188Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2012