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Full Description
This book curates and examines colonial-era photographs from the late nineteenth to early twentieth centuries sourced from photo-archives of former British and Dutch colonies in Southeast Asia, uncovering how femininities in the Malay world are represented through visual imagery and their role in shaping colonial social relations.
Through seven thematic chapters ranging from colonial exhibitions to women's work, fashion, postcard representation, and girls' schooling, the book demonstrates how photographs contain dialogic potential to question colonial power structures. Using visual ethnography and decolonial analysis, it reveals how the intersections of camera, chimera, and colonisation subtly divided people along lines of race, class, and gender. Although many subjects remain nameless, their images reveal layered narratives of colonial social formations and evolving national histories.
This book is perfect for those studying visual ethnography, decolonial methodologies, and the intersection of photography and colonialism in the Malay world, as well as scholars, postgraduate students, and researchers in postcolonial studies, Southeast Asian studies, visual culture, gender studies, and colonial history.
Contents
1. Introduction: the photo-archive and femininities in the Malay world 2. Re-curating and de-archiving many femininities through a virtual exhibition on Being and Becoming 3. Disrupting an imagined everyday life: women's work and place 4. Pursuing the woman in the white dress: photography and (im)posed female images from late nineteenth to early twentieth centuries Malay world 5. Constructing femininities and race through the postcard: what, and who is the "Malay" woman? 6. From needlework to needling: picturing and puncturing the schooling of girls in colonial Malaya and Singapore 7. Conclusion: epilogue to other femininities and summary of themes



