Mary A. Procida
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Women, men and political power
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Anglo-Indian women and Indian men encountered each other not in sexual terms, but rather as political competitors vying for power in the combative environment of imperial politics. Observing changes that granted political power primarily to Indian men, Anglo-Indian wives were concerned that the unofficial roles they had carved out for themselves in the politics of imperial India also would be foreclosed. In the British Raj, Anglo-Indian women's political power stemmed not from their citizenship in a democratic polity, but from their status as imperial rulers. Political reforms instituted by British imperial rulers, beginning in the late nineteenth century and escalating rapidly by the interwar years, dramatically reformulated Indian politics and political institutions, reluctantly ceding greater authority to Indian men. Ideas about race and gender further complicated the political transformations, as well as the relationship between Anglo-Indian women and Indian men.

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Married to the empire

Gender, politics and imperialism in India, 1883–1947

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