How ordinary forms of writing—including manuals, petitions, almanacs, and magazines—shaped the way colonial subjects understood their place in empire In Required Reading, Priyasha Mukhopadhyay offers a new and provocative history of reading that centers archives of everyday writing from the British empire. Mukhopadhyay rummages in the drawers of bureaucratic offices and the cupboards of publishers in search of how historical readers in colonial South Asia responded to texts ranging from licenses to manuals, how they made sense of them, and what this can tell us about their experiences living in the shadow of a vast imperial power. Taking these engagements seriously, she argues, is the first step to challenging conventional notions of what it means to read.Mukhopadhyay’s account is populated by a cast of characters that spans the ranks of colonial society, from bored soldiers to frustrated bureaucrats. These readers formed close, even intimate relationships with everyday texts. She presents four case studies: a soldier’s manual, a cache of bureaucratic documents, a collection of astrological almanacs, and a women’s literary magazine. Tracking moments in which readers refused to read, were unable to read, and read in part, she uncovers the dizzying array of material, textual, and aural practices these texts elicited. Even selectively read almanacs and impenetrable account books, she finds, were springboards for personal, world-shaping readerly relationships.Untethered from the constraints of conventional literacy, Required Reading reimagines how texts work in the world and how we understand the very idea of reading.
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“Priyasha Mukhopadhyay’s ambitious and inventive excavation of ‘functional’ genres in colonial South Asia brings back to life a forgotten textual landscape whose impact can be explained by none of our usual literary-critical interpretive operations. Neither passively absorbing the content of these works nor heroically repudiating them, the otherwise undocumented historical figures reconstructed by her meticulous research manage to assent and reappropriate at the same time, forging surprising blends of suspicion with belief and identification with distance.”—Leah Price, Rutgers University“Required Reading is an extraordinarily inventive work of scholarship that brilliantly uncovers the material bases for modernity’s explosive contract with print. Mukhopadhyay’s research on Empire’s archives offers two dazzling conclusions: that imperial textuality articulated its power but paradoxically seeded resistance; and little of what constitutes ‘reading’ has been literary or even literal.”—Priya Joshi, Temple University“This enchanting and witty book goes rummaging in the paper residues of the British empire and emerges with compelling and inventive insights on readers, reception and the history of imperial rule itself.”—Isabel Hofmeyr, University of the Witwatersrand
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780691257693
Publisert
2024-08-20
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Om bidragsyterne

Priyasha Mukhopadhyay is assistant professor of English at Yale University.