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During colonial rule of India, relations between British men and Indian women became regular practice, and over generations a large and growing 'mixed race' community developed. They would come to be known as Anglo-Indians and have their own distinct identity. Anglo-Indians held a unique position at the crossroads of race, color, and class. They were never fully colonizers nor colonized, but something in-between, at times playing the roles of either, neither, or both. When the British left and India was granted its independence in 1947, Anglo-Indians would face an existential dilemma. In today's episode, we sit with Uther Charlton-Stevens, author of 'Anglo-India and The End of Empire,' and reexamine empire and decolonization through the eyes of Anglo-Indians.
Get the book here: https://amzn.to/4eJg7fn
Visit our Shop: https://shopbrownhistory.com/
Become a patron: https://www.patreon.com/brownhistory
Books covered on the podcast so far: https://amzn.to/42TH768
Book Recommendations:
An Anglo-Indian Childhood by Shirley Pritchard
Embers: An Anglo-Indian Memoir by Joy Chase
Anglo-Indian Lives in Pakistan by Dorothy McMenamin
Children of Colonialism: Anglo-Indians in a Postcolonial World by Lionel Caplan
Anglo-Indian Identity: Past and Present, in India and the Diaspora by Robyn Andrews (Editor), Merin Simi Raj (Editor)
By Brown History4.8
9292 ratings
During colonial rule of India, relations between British men and Indian women became regular practice, and over generations a large and growing 'mixed race' community developed. They would come to be known as Anglo-Indians and have their own distinct identity. Anglo-Indians held a unique position at the crossroads of race, color, and class. They were never fully colonizers nor colonized, but something in-between, at times playing the roles of either, neither, or both. When the British left and India was granted its independence in 1947, Anglo-Indians would face an existential dilemma. In today's episode, we sit with Uther Charlton-Stevens, author of 'Anglo-India and The End of Empire,' and reexamine empire and decolonization through the eyes of Anglo-Indians.
Get the book here: https://amzn.to/4eJg7fn
Visit our Shop: https://shopbrownhistory.com/
Become a patron: https://www.patreon.com/brownhistory
Books covered on the podcast so far: https://amzn.to/42TH768
Book Recommendations:
An Anglo-Indian Childhood by Shirley Pritchard
Embers: An Anglo-Indian Memoir by Joy Chase
Anglo-Indian Lives in Pakistan by Dorothy McMenamin
Children of Colonialism: Anglo-Indians in a Postcolonial World by Lionel Caplan
Anglo-Indian Identity: Past and Present, in India and the Diaspora by Robyn Andrews (Editor), Merin Simi Raj (Editor)

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