Women &Amp; Others 2007
DOI: 10.1057/9780230607323_6
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The Memsahib Myth: Englishwomen in Colonial India

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Cited by 18 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…43 As Ruth Bloch asserts, their 'morality' gave women an air of inherent innocence that gender and imperial historians suggest made them ideal symbols for the supposed virtue of Western civilisation and culture. 44 White women were therefore upheld as paragons of cultural and racial superiority, making their private and public conduct in colonial spaces matters of particular anxiety for Westerners. 45 As in Britain and New England, the White woman's prescribed domain in the colonies was the domestic realm, 'synonymous' with femininity and associated with traits such as modesty, chastity, piety, compassion and virtue.…”
Section: The Only Girl In Amoymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…43 As Ruth Bloch asserts, their 'morality' gave women an air of inherent innocence that gender and imperial historians suggest made them ideal symbols for the supposed virtue of Western civilisation and culture. 44 White women were therefore upheld as paragons of cultural and racial superiority, making their private and public conduct in colonial spaces matters of particular anxiety for Westerners. 45 As in Britain and New England, the White woman's prescribed domain in the colonies was the domestic realm, 'synonymous' with femininity and associated with traits such as modesty, chastity, piety, compassion and virtue.…”
Section: The Only Girl In Amoymentioning
confidence: 99%