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Household Crimes and Domestic Order: Keeping the Peace in Colonial Calcutta, c. 1770–c. 1840

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 July 2004

Extract

During the early years of British expansion in Bengal, from the 1770s to the 1840s, British courts ruled on at least three dozen domestic violence cases. In the process of ruling on crimes in which native women were victims of burglary, rape, and murder at the hands of European men, judges on the Supreme Court of Calcutta became intimately involved with enforcing domestic peace and containing the social threat posed by interracial conjugal relationships between lower-class European soldiers and merchants and the native women with whom they cohabited or married. While high-ranking, upper-class men may have also physically abused native women with whom they were intimate, these relationships were rarely the subject of judicial scrutiny. Through criminal trials of domestic crimes or ‘intimate violence’, British judges and magistrates, who were among the highest status positions in the civil service, managed the sexual and familial transgressions of lower-ranking European soldiers, merchants and civil employees, thereby ‘making empire respectable,’ while simultaneously enabling lower-ranking men to enjoy continued sexual access to local women.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

This article has been much improved by suggestions from Ian Barrow, Douglas Haynes, Michael Fisher, Manu Goswami, Jyosna Rege, Sally Engle Merry, and audiences at the conference, ‘South Asia, 1780–1840: The Early Transition to Colonialism,’ at Dartmouth College, December 2001, at the Association of Asian Studies in Washington, D.C., and at the South Asia seminar series at the Humanities Center at Harvard hosted by Sharmila Sen.