Tim Allender
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Introduction
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The introduction sets the scene for the book by looking at the example of one Roman Catholic family in Aden. This family sends its children to school in Agra, north India, using male Roman Catholic connections. The tragic story of one daughter illustrates the racial, religious and geographical complexity of the Roman Catholic overlay in colonial India. The historical and cross-disciplinary methods of research for the book are explained. Who the women religious in India were is then outlined as well as the secular and religious patriarchies who interacted with them. The transactional nature of these women is discussed. The chapter then explains why the author sees these Roman Catholic women as the ‘strange products of empire’ when situating them within the current literature and research about women, empire and religion.

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Empire religiosity

Convent habits in colonial and postcolonial India

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