Front cover image for Legible bodies : race, criminality, and colonialism in South Asia

Legible bodies : race, criminality, and colonialism in South Asia

"From the late eighteenth to mid-twentieth centuries, the British incarcerated tens of thousands of prisoners in South Asian jails and transported tens of thousands of convicts to penal settlements overseas in South East Asia, the Indian Ocean and the Andaman Islands. Legible Bodies explores the treatment of these 'native criminals' and shreds light on a largely overlooked practice of empire." "British penal administrators created a series of elaborate mechanisms to render 'criminal bodies' legible. They introduced visual tags to identify prisoners and convicts, seeking to make and/or read them both as individuals and as members of broader penal categories. Scientists and ethnographers used prisonsers to explore biological and social manifestations of the Indian 'other'."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2004
New York, NY, USA : Berg, Oxford, 2004
History
viii, 245 pages : illustrations, map ; 23 cm
9781859738603, 9781859738603, 9781859738559, 1859738605, 1859738605, 1859738559
54407422
Introduction: textualizing the Indian criminal body
Inscribing the criminal body: the penal tattoo
'Surely there is more in this than mere ornament': ethnography, surveillance, and the decorative tattoo
The question of convict dress
Voir/savoir: photographing, measuring and fingerprinting the Indian criminal
Emperors of the Lilliputians: criminal physiology and the Indian social body