Synopses & Reviews
Emma Roberts' 1835 work, compiled from articles she published in the Asiatic Journal, was well received in India and England. Roberts lived in India from 1828 with her sister and her brother-in-law, who served in the 61st Bengal infantry. In 1830 she moved to Calcutta, where she edited and wrote for the Oriental Observer and contributed to periodicals and annuals. Returning to London in 1832, she threw herself into the literary world, publishing in several different fields. This book reveals her sympathetic attitude to the Indian people and her genuine interest in providing a thorough and honest report of their culture. Volume 1 begins with a description of Calcutta. It reflects the diversity of Roberts' interests, covering topics from marriages to murders, domestic arrangements to military operations, religion to shopping, and architecture to dancing. For more information on this author, see http://orlando.cambridge.org/public/svPeople?person_id=robeem
Synopsis
A fascinating contemporary account of Indian society in the 1830s, at the height of the East India Company's power.
Synopsis
Emma Roberts' three-volume work, published in 1835, engagingly covers a wide variety of aspects of India's social, political, religious, and domestic culture, as well its natural history. Written at the height of the East India Company's power, this is an important resource for researchers of colonialism or women's writing.
Table of Contents
1. Calcutta; 2. Mistaken notions respecting Anglo-Indian suitors; 3. The Mofussil; 4. Drawbacks to feminine industry; 5. Beauty of Berhampore; 6. Military movements; 7. Patna; 8. Different methods of travelling; 9. Situation of Benares; 10. State of the river in the rains; 11. Interest excited by murders.