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6 - Fragmented Families

Tracing the Afterlives of Working-Class India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 October 2023

Alexandra Lindgren-Gibson
Affiliation:
University of Mississippi
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Summary

This chapter revisits some of the individuals and families we have encountered throughout the text, following these families past their time in India. Thinking about the forces that compelled families and individuals to make these choices, or foreclosed possibilities, provides an answer to the question of what happened to popular and historical memory of the working-class Raj. Back in Britain, men and women who had enjoyed an elevated social status could find it difficult to reintegrate into their communities of origin, which reinforced conformity rather than difference. As a result, returning Britons purposefully forgot tales of Indian service and elite pretensions in efforts to manage family relations. In contrast, those men and women who settled with their families in India or other parts of the empire – or who chose to abandon their families of origin – had a greater incentive to embrace a new class status and create family histories celebrating their climb up the social ranks of the British Empire.

Type
Chapter
Information
Working-Class Raj
Colonialism and the Making of Class in British India
, pp. 149 - 167
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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