Book contents
- Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1850s
- Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition
- Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1850s
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Pictures of Nature
- Chapter 2 ‘When I Came Back, It Was … to the Love of a New Generation’
- Chapter 3 George Eliot, the Westminster Circle, and Karl Ernst von Baer’s Embryological Germ Theory
- Chapter 4 The 1850s Sustainability Novel
- Chapter 5 Serialising London in ‘Twice Round the Clock’
- Chapter 6 Theatre in the 1850s
- Chapter 7 Beyond the Art of Conversation
- Chapter 8 Making Soldiers Count
- Chapter 9 Finding the Lost
- Chapter 10 British India in the 1850s
- Chapter 11 Christian Heroism
- Chapter 12 Horsepower in the Railway Age
- Chapter 13 Trauma, Gender, and Resistance
- Chapter 14 The Poetry of Married Life
- Chapter 15 George Eliot, Henry James, Realism, and Europe
- Index
Chapter 2 - ‘When I Came Back, It Was … to the Love of a New Generation’
Affective Genealogies of Race in Dinah Craik’s The Half-Caste
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2025
- Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1850s
- Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition
- Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1850s
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Pictures of Nature
- Chapter 2 ‘When I Came Back, It Was … to the Love of a New Generation’
- Chapter 3 George Eliot, the Westminster Circle, and Karl Ernst von Baer’s Embryological Germ Theory
- Chapter 4 The 1850s Sustainability Novel
- Chapter 5 Serialising London in ‘Twice Round the Clock’
- Chapter 6 Theatre in the 1850s
- Chapter 7 Beyond the Art of Conversation
- Chapter 8 Making Soldiers Count
- Chapter 9 Finding the Lost
- Chapter 10 British India in the 1850s
- Chapter 11 Christian Heroism
- Chapter 12 Horsepower in the Railway Age
- Chapter 13 Trauma, Gender, and Resistance
- Chapter 14 The Poetry of Married Life
- Chapter 15 George Eliot, Henry James, Realism, and Europe
- Index
Summary
Dinah Craik’s 1851 novella The Half-Caste tells the story of how a half-Indian heiress, Zillah Le Poer, faces manipulative attempts by the greedy British side of her family to control her fortune which she thwarts by marrying her older Scottish guardian. This reading of Craik’s novel examines the production of race at a period when dominant British imperialism was believed to depend largely on hierarchies of race allegedly constructed by heredity. Walters argues that Craik describes how new racial identities can be produced by the ‘affective capacity of brown, Eurasian, female bodies to feel connection with – and dependence on white women’, with resulting implications for racial hierarchies and Empire itself. The chapter examines the idea of race in part as a function of feeling and reveals a ‘slippage between affective and racially scientific methods of assessing difference’.
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- Nineteenth-Century Literature in Transition: The 1850s , pp. 45 - 68Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025