Colonial Discourse and the Suffering of Indian American Children: A Francophone Postcolonial Analysis
Intro -- Preface -- Chapter Breakdown -- Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- 1: James Mill and the History of the History of British India -- James Mill and the Making of His Magnum Opus -- 2: The Francophone Postcolonial Thinkers and the Colonizer-Colonized Dialectic -- Colonized: The Constructed "Other" of the Colonizer -- Racism and the Portrait of the Colonized -- Colonialism, Racism, and the Complicity of Intellectuals in Perpetuating the Nexus -- 3: Primitivizing the Hindus: Hindus as Oppressive and Hierarchical -- Savage and Primitive Hindus: No Sense of History -- Hindu Society: Hierarchical and Oppressive -- Hindu Governance: Despotic, Authoritative, Absolutist, Hierarchical, and Oppressive -- Hindu Laws: Primitive, Savage, Undeveloped, Hierarchical, and Oppressive -- Hinduism: Primitive, Savage, Irrational, Incoherent, Immoral, Childlike, and Pagan -- Hindus: Hierarchical, Oppressive, Women-abusers, Effeminate, Inhuman, Villainous, Timid, Weak, Cowardly, Lazy, Penurious, Greedy, Filthy, Superstitious, and Fatalistic -- 4: Imagining the Hindus and Hinduism -- Postmodern Philosophy of Science, Self-Referentiality, and Binaries -- James Mill, Utilitarianism, and Scottish Enlightenment -- Description of Hindu Society: A Sheer Projection of British Society Which Mill Wanted to Reform -- The Hindu Brahmins in Mill's History are English Clergy -- Mill's Hinduism Is the Mirror Image of the Christianity of the Church of England that He Wanted to Suppress and Transform -- Mill's Hindu Form of Governance Is Fabricated and Projected against the Conditions of Governance He Wanted to Undermine and Suppress in Britain -- Mill Imagines Hindu Jurisprudence against the Backdrop of English Laws that He Wanted to Expel from Britain -- Hindu Laws and Civil Code -- Hindu Laws and Penal Code -- Hindu Laws and the Code of Procedure.