Burning Women: Widows, Witches, and Early Modern European Travelers in India

Portada
Palgrave Macmillan, 18 de gen. 2003 - 278 pàgines
In early modern Europe, the circulation of visual and verbal transmissions of sati, or Hindu widowburning, not only informed responses to the ritualized violence of Hindu culture, but also intersected in fascinating ways with specifically European forms of ritualized violence and European constructions of gender ideology. European accounts of women being burned in India uncannily commented on the burnings of women as witches and criminal wives in Europe. When Europeans narrated their accounts of sati, perhaps the most striking illustration of Hindu patriarchal violence, they did not specifically connect the act of widowburning to a corresponding European signifier: the gruesome ceremonial burnings of women as witches. In examining early modern representations of sati, the book focuses specifically on those strategies that enabled European travelers to protect their own identity as uniquely civilized amidst spectacular displays of "Eastern barbarity."

Sobre l'autor (2003)

Pompa Banerjee teaches at the University of Colorado at Denver. She is especially interested in the cross-cultural potential of early modern European encounters with cultural difference in Asia, America, and Africa.

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