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The Stain of White: Liaisons, Memories, and White Men as Relatives

During British colonial rule some matrilineal Thiyya women in North Kerala, India, had liaisons with British men. While the response of the caste (here, a Backward caste) to these liaisons shifted over time, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century many women who had liaisons and their fam...

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Podrobná bibliografie
Hlavní autor: Janaki Abraham
Médium: Printed Book
Vydáno: Men and Masculinities 2006; 9; 131 2006
Témata:
On-line přístup:http://10.26.1.76/ks/00742.pdf
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Shrnutí:During British colonial rule some matrilineal Thiyya women in North Kerala, India, had liaisons with British men. While the response of the caste (here, a Backward caste) to these liaisons shifted over time, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century many women who had liaisons and their families were excommunicated. A "white connection" became a stain and kinship with the white man was denied or shrouded. This article looks at the ways in which both the liaisons and the denial of the white man as father or relative were located within practices of matrilineal kinship. Furthermore, this article seeks to understand how these liaisons are remembered today and how the presence of the white man as a relative is layered over by processes of forgetting and remembering.