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Becoming Elizabeth

Becoming Elizabeth In the late eighteenth century, a Mughal woman named Sharaf un-Nisa lived with and bore children by the first Company Supervisor of Purnea. She followed him to Britain, changed her name to Elizabeth, and converted to Christianity. Cohabitations between native women and British East India Company servants were common. While scholars have attempted to compensate for the notorious dearth of information about these native women’s lives by reading East India Company archives, material evidence of this woman’s life lends insight to the embodied process of Anglicization. This article supplements existing research on native consorts with consideration of a family archive to consider the subjectivity of Elizabeth Sharaf un-Nisa as a process of transformation characterized by hybridity. This argument proceeds by a textual material analysis of a diverse range of materials from a family archive, including eighteenth and early nineteenth century private correspondence in English and Persian, as well as material analysis of paintings, jewelry, textiles, and a penmanship book. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The American Historical Review Oxford University Press

Becoming Elizabeth

The American Historical Review , Volume 128 (1): 33 – Mar 31, 2023

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Publisher
Oxford University Press
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Historical Association. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com
ISSN
0002-8762
eISSN
1937-5239
DOI
10.1093/ahr/rhad008
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

In the late eighteenth century, a Mughal woman named Sharaf un-Nisa lived with and bore children by the first Company Supervisor of Purnea. She followed him to Britain, changed her name to Elizabeth, and converted to Christianity. Cohabitations between native women and British East India Company servants were common. While scholars have attempted to compensate for the notorious dearth of information about these native women’s lives by reading East India Company archives, material evidence of this woman’s life lends insight to the embodied process of Anglicization. This article supplements existing research on native consorts with consideration of a family archive to consider the subjectivity of Elizabeth Sharaf un-Nisa as a process of transformation characterized by hybridity. This argument proceeds by a textual material analysis of a diverse range of materials from a family archive, including eighteenth and early nineteenth century private correspondence in English and Persian, as well as material analysis of paintings, jewelry, textiles, and a penmanship book.

Journal

The American Historical ReviewOxford University Press

Published: Mar 31, 2023

Keywords: Gender/Masculinity/Femininity; Empire; Colonial/Colonialism; Islam

There are no references for this article.