27%OFF

Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.
The Half-Caste (Broadview Editions)
Dinah Mulock Craik
€ 32.99
€ 24.02
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for The Half-Caste (Broadview Editions)
Paperback. The Half-Caste is a story of race relations in colonial India; daring and progressive in its time, it is still fresh today. Editor(s): Edmundson, Melissa. Series: Broadview Editions. Num Pages: 200 pages. BIC Classification: 1DBK; 2AB; 3JH; DSBF; DSC; DSK. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 143 x 261 x 26. Weight in Grams: 232.
Dinah Mulock Craik's The Half-Caste concerns the coming-of-age of its title character, the mixed-race Zillah Le Poer, daughter of an English merchant and an Indian princess. Sent back to England as a young girl, Zillah has no knowledge that she is an heiress. She lives with her uncle Le Poer, his wife, and two daughters, and is treated as little more than a servant in the household. Zillah's situation is gradually improved when Cassandra Pryor is employed as a governess to the Le Poer daughters and takes an interest in the mysterious cousin. Craik explores issues of gender, race, and empire in the Victorian period in this compact and gripping novella. Along with a newly-annotated text, this Broadview edition includes a critical introduction that discusses Craik's involvement with contemporary racial and imperialist attitudes, her place within the broader genre of Anglo-Indian fiction, and the importance of Zillah Le Poer as a positive symbol of empire. The edition is also enriched with relevant contemporary contextual material, including Dinah Mulock Craik's writing on gender and female employment, British views on the biracial Eurasian community in India, and writings on the Victorian governess.
Product Details
Publisher
Broadview Press
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2016
Series
Broadview Editions
Condition
New
Weight
231g
Number of Pages
200
Place of Publication
Peterborough, Canada
ISBN
9781554812752
SKU
V9781554812752
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 5 to 9 working days
Ref
99-2
About Dinah Mulock Craik
Melissa Edmundson is an Instructor in the Division of Arts and Letters at the University of South Carolina, USA.
Reviews for The Half-Caste (Broadview Editions)
Melissa Edmundson has supplied a most useful addition to the literature of Victorian empire and race. Craik's story is supplemented by excerpts from Philip Meadows Taylor's novel Seeta along with a story by William Browne Hockley, 'The Half-Caste Daughter.' These texts are supplemented by well-chosen supporting materials delineating attitudes toward 'Eurasians' in nineteenth-century India, and together they create a rich context for understanding Craik's often overlooked novella. Edmundson shows how Craik's work confounds the usual binaries and prejudices of the period even as it creates a sympathetic governess character. This edition would make a fine pairing with Jane Eyre or with Kipling's Plain Tales from the Hills in an undergraduate course on Victorian empire.
Mary Ellis Gibson, University of Glasgow The Half-Caste is a timely and well-contextualized edition of a fascinating work of fiction. The editorial material sheds light on the broader cultural importance of the story's many threads, including the role of the British Empire, the 'Eurasian Question, ' and the place of the Victorian governess and work for women.
Karen Bourrier, University of Calgary This edition of Dinah Mulock Craik's long neglected 1851 novella makes a fine contribution to the scholarship on Victorian studies on empire and race. Melissa Edmundson's ample introduction provides clear biographical, historical, and cultural background to situate Craik's life and her fiction within the complexities of views about the Eurasian woman, British identity, and colonial power. Deft summaries, expanded by a rich assortment of supplementary materials, point to the frequency with which Victorian authors addressed the fraught gender and race issues the Eurasian woman emblematized and prove that Craik's The Half-Caste, with its progressive narrative about cultural merging, struck a decidedly different note. Additional materials assist in categorizing The Half-Caste with that other predominant nineteenth-century genre, the governess novel. Comprehensive explanatory footnotes and an informed and wide-ranging bibliography tempt the reader for future critical (as well as fun) reading. Edmundson ensures her own audience hears Craik's strong voice about the period's significant contemporary issues and more than demonstrates her own admiration for this important Victorian woman author.
Joellen Masters, Boston University, co-editor of The Latchkey: A Journal of New Woman Studies Melissa Edmundson has supplied a most useful addition to the literature of Victorian empire and race. Craik's story is supplemented by excerpts from Philip Meadows Taylor's novel Seeta along with a story by William Browne Hockley, 'The Half-Caste Daughter.' These texts are supplemented by well-chosen supporting materials delineating attitudes toward 'Eurasians' in nineteenth-century India, and together they create a rich context for understanding Craik's often overlooked novella. Edmundson shows how Craik's work confounds the usual binaries and prejudices of the period even as it creates a sympathetic governess character. This edition would make a fine pairing with Jane Eyre or with Kipling's Plain Tales from the Hills in an undergraduate course on Victorian empire.
Mary Ellis Gibson, University of Glasgow The Half-Caste is a timely and well-contextualized edition of a fascinating work of fiction. The editorial material sheds light on the broader cultural importance of the story's many threads, including the role of the British Empire, the 'Eurasian Question, ' and the place of the Victorian governess and work for women.
Karen Bourrier, University of Calgary
Mary Ellis Gibson, University of Glasgow The Half-Caste is a timely and well-contextualized edition of a fascinating work of fiction. The editorial material sheds light on the broader cultural importance of the story's many threads, including the role of the British Empire, the 'Eurasian Question, ' and the place of the Victorian governess and work for women.
Karen Bourrier, University of Calgary This edition of Dinah Mulock Craik's long neglected 1851 novella makes a fine contribution to the scholarship on Victorian studies on empire and race. Melissa Edmundson's ample introduction provides clear biographical, historical, and cultural background to situate Craik's life and her fiction within the complexities of views about the Eurasian woman, British identity, and colonial power. Deft summaries, expanded by a rich assortment of supplementary materials, point to the frequency with which Victorian authors addressed the fraught gender and race issues the Eurasian woman emblematized and prove that Craik's The Half-Caste, with its progressive narrative about cultural merging, struck a decidedly different note. Additional materials assist in categorizing The Half-Caste with that other predominant nineteenth-century genre, the governess novel. Comprehensive explanatory footnotes and an informed and wide-ranging bibliography tempt the reader for future critical (as well as fun) reading. Edmundson ensures her own audience hears Craik's strong voice about the period's significant contemporary issues and more than demonstrates her own admiration for this important Victorian woman author.
Joellen Masters, Boston University, co-editor of The Latchkey: A Journal of New Woman Studies Melissa Edmundson has supplied a most useful addition to the literature of Victorian empire and race. Craik's story is supplemented by excerpts from Philip Meadows Taylor's novel Seeta along with a story by William Browne Hockley, 'The Half-Caste Daughter.' These texts are supplemented by well-chosen supporting materials delineating attitudes toward 'Eurasians' in nineteenth-century India, and together they create a rich context for understanding Craik's often overlooked novella. Edmundson shows how Craik's work confounds the usual binaries and prejudices of the period even as it creates a sympathetic governess character. This edition would make a fine pairing with Jane Eyre or with Kipling's Plain Tales from the Hills in an undergraduate course on Victorian empire.
Mary Ellis Gibson, University of Glasgow The Half-Caste is a timely and well-contextualized edition of a fascinating work of fiction. The editorial material sheds light on the broader cultural importance of the story's many threads, including the role of the British Empire, the 'Eurasian Question, ' and the place of the Victorian governess and work for women.
Karen Bourrier, University of Calgary