‘A Miserable Sham’: Flora Annie Steel's Short Fictions and the Question of Indian Women's Reform

Feminist Review 94 (1):55-74 (2010)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

The article examines a few short stories of Flora Annie Steel, a Scottish memsahib who spent a number of decades in the late nineteenth century in India with her husband, a British colonial official. Steel's short stories are interesting because they were produced at a time when most Anglo-Indian fictions (especially those authored by memsahibs) focused exclusively on station romances, and they explore with some seriousness and sense of complexity, issues related to the impact of Imperial reformatory intervention in the lives of Indian women. Her female contemporaries wrote fictions that more often than not completely ignored the existence of Indians, and even famous male writers like Kipling stereotypically reduced Indian women either to sexually licentious or completely passive, voiceless entities. Steel, in her stories, examines questions of gender, sexuality and reform in the context of Indian women's lives in ways that often seem to go beyond such racial stereotypes. The stories have been examined within the context of the different political and social formations of the specific regions – Punjab or Bengal – in which they are based, since women's reform had very different trajectories in these regions. The remarkableness of Steel's stories, however, lies in their attempting to look at the reform question from the Indian women's perspectives. What cannot be ignored are the ways in which these stories attempt to go beyond the prevalent Anglo-Indian modes of stereotyping or completely erasing Indian women and register their voices in examining questions related to their reform. This is not to say that racial and Imperial hierarchies are entirely abandoned in her writings. In fact the omniscient narrator in these fictions often narrates in ways that sustain and strengthen such hierarchies. However, there are moments when the diegetic narrative mode gives way to an ironically nuanced narrative voice and to ambivalences that seem to gesture at complex questioning of the bases of Imperial authority and its ostensibly benevolent intervention in the lives of Indian women. It is these moments that make the stories worth exploring.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 92,813

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Metanarratives And Textual Ironies In Robert Kroetsch's Gone Indian.Tanja Cvetkovic - 2002 - Facta Universitatis, Series: Linguistics and Literature 9 (2):335-340.
Impressions of Anglo-Indian Society in R. Kipling’s Early Creative Art.Olga Posudiyevska - 2016 - International Letters of Social and Humanistic Sciences 71:1-5.
Women Empowerment in Modern India.Shruti Singh - 2013 - SOCRATES 1 (1):13-23.
Status of Women in Indian Society.Rekha Singh - 1998 - The Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 7:47-50.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-11-24

Downloads
6 (#1,479,724)

6 months
2 (#1,249,707)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations