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Full Description
Masters and servants explores the politics of colonial mastery and domestic servitude in the neighbouring British colonies of Singapore and Darwin. Through an exploration of master-servant relationships within British, white Australian and Chinese homes, this book illustrates the centrality of the domestic realm to the colonial project. It is the first comparative history of domestic service and British colonialism in the tropics, and highlights the important role which 'houseboys' played in colonial households in the tropics and the common preference for Chinese 'houseboys' throughout Southeast Asia.
The book is meticulously researched, and draws from archives that have never been addressed in this way before. Its highly original and innovative approach, which combines comparative analysis with a focus on transcolonial connections, puts the book at the forefront of current postcolonial scholarship. The insights that Masters and servants provides into the domestic politics of colonial rule make this book essential reading for students and scholars of empire.
Contents
Introduction: Domestic service and colonial mastery in the tropics
1. A 'second Singapore'? The connected histories of Darwin and Singapore, 1860s-1930s
2. Historicising 'houseboys': cultures of male servitude in the tropics, 1880s-1910s
3. White masters and their Chinese 'houseboys': masculinity, sexuality and racial anxiety in the home, 1880s-1930s
4. White women and the case of the disappearing Chinese 'houseboys', 1910s-30s
5. Idle mems, weary wives and 'red hot revolutionaries': domestic tension and political antagonism in the home, 1910s-30s
6. Masters and colonisers: the politics of Chinese domestic mastery, 1920s-30s
Conclusion: Domestic service at the end of empire
Select bibliography of secondary sources
Index



