British houses in late Mughal Delhi
Material type:
- 9781783272082
- 720.9410954 S4B7
Item type | Current library | Item location | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Vikram Sarabhai Library | Rack 40-B / Slot 2319 (2nd Floor, East Wing) | Non-fiction | General Stacks | 720.9410954 S4B7 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 200843 |
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Knowledge of Delhi: The Eighteenth Century
Chapter 2: Hybrid Accommodations: David Ochterlony, the First Residency and the Mubarak Bagh
Chapter 3: A lovely Wilderness: Charles Metcalfe and the Garden Houses at Shalimar
Chapter 4: Truly Fairy Palaces: Robert Smith in Delhi and in Europe
Chapter 5: The World Displayed: William Fraser and his House on the Hill
Chapter 6: A Tomb with ViewL Thomas Theophilus Metcalfe's Dilkusha
Chapter 7: Dreaming of Home
Bibliography
This book explores ambivalence in the domestic building activities of a group of East India Company officials in Delhi in the fifty years following British occupation in 1803. Arguing that houses, their location and their contents directly or subliminally reveal the values and beliefs of the individuals who commissioned and lived in them, it uses houses to examine the changing ways the British manipulated power, both relating to and resisting the pre-existing spatial layout of the city. The re-use of palaces and of monumental religious structures as dwellings, as well as new houses that appeared formally classical but concealed adaptations to local ways of living, show that despite an apparent desire to maintain cultural separation, there was both complexity and contradiction in the interrelationship of the British authority and the failing Mughal polity. The book also shows how room sequencing and function demonstrate a lack of rigid distinction between the official and individual roles played by Company officials. Household objects have multiple meanings depending on their use and context. As the taste and choices made in these houses were primarily those of men, the book also contributes to our understanding of competing models of manhood in British India.
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