Daniells' Calcutta: Visions of Life, Death, and Nabobery in Late-Eighteenth-Century British India
This study investigates the form and function of early, mass-produced visual representations of British society in Calcutta during the last two decades of the eighteenth-century, a time when the English East India Company's power was expanding in South Asia. In particular, this essay examines t...
Main Author: | Rasico, Patrick David |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Samira Sheikh |
Format: | Others |
Language: | en |
Published: |
VANDERBILT
2015
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-03252015-192955/ |
Similar Items
-
William Tolly and His Canal: Navigating Calcutta in the Late-Eighteenth Century
by: Kaustubh Mani Sengupta
Published: (2021-08-01) -
Building Calcutta: Construction Trends in the Making of the Capital of British India, 1880‒1911
by: Nilina Deb Lal
Published: (2018-01-01) -
In the pale's shadow: Indians and British forts in eighteenth-century America
by: Ingram, Daniel Patrick
Published: (2008) -
Strategic Representations of Black Women in Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth-Century Masculine British Print
by: Jockel, Joan Elizabeth
Published: (2018) -
Natural history and the British periodicals in the eighteenth century /
by: Baesel, Don Raymond
Published: (1974)