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Textile Orientalisms
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Considering popular literary images of Indian and Paisley shawls as markers of fashion, class, gender, and race during the long nineteenth century, this book shows how Indian imports and influences shaped wider discussions of British literature, art, politics, and empire.

About the Author

Suchitra Choudhury is a research fellow supported by the William Lind Foundation at the University of Glasgow and an independent scholar. Her articles have appeared in Textile History and Victorian Literature and Culture. She is the cocurator of the display Paisley Shawls in Literature at Scotland’s Paisley Museum (2023).

Reviews

From diplomatic gift to fashion trend, literary trope to colonialism’s violent accessory, the cashmere shawl is the star of Textile Orientalisms. Expertly weaving historical and literary sources, Suchitra Choudhury spins a vibrant tale of this culturally rich textile, intertwining the object and its many soft powers with British Empire scholarship.
*Susan Hiner, author of Accessories to Modernity: Fashion and the Feminine in Nineteenth-Century France*

Suchitra Choudhury weaves together entangled histories and discovers that the humble shawl is in fact a powerful symbol of empire, trade, industry, class, gender, design, and fashion, as well as being a symbol of identity, authenticity, family, and belonging.
*Leonie Bell, director, Victoria and Albert Museum Dundee*

A magisterial exploration…. Suchitra Choudhury has dug deeply in the archives of British India to reveal the shawl’s multiple meanings as a desired fashion accessory and orientalist icon. Linking the fashion system to imperial governance, gender and class insurrection, her book demonstrates that despite its privileged place at the heart of British domesticity, the ‘old Cashmere shawl’ possessed an uncanny power to disturb and disrupt. An important, original, and long-awaited contribution to the literary study of British India.
*Nigel Leask, author of Stepping Westward: Writing the Highland Tour, c.1720-1830*

The definitive work on the subject of Cashmere and Paisley shawls in all of their intricate significances within eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English history and fiction.
*Deborah Denenholz Morse, Sara E. Nance Professor of English, College of William & Mary*

An original and arresting piece of scholarship…. With its broad range, it should find a wide readership among those interested in fashion and the novel, literary critics, and cultural and imperial historians alike.
*Kate Teltscher, author of India Inscribed: European and British Writing on India, 1600–1800*

An impressive and extensive study on the cashmere shawl in British literature, anatomizing it as both a valuable commodity and a rich metaphor in literature. Suchitra Choudhury’s work is unique in denoting the shawl’s significance in both feminine and masculine experiences, and the manifold interpretations it engendered, creating ‘a “grammar” of consumption’ across gender and imperial discourses….It would be very useful for students of fashion, Victorian, and material culture studies, as well as suitable for the general reading public.
*Fashion Theory*

This beautifully illustrated and engagingly written monograph surveys a wide range of materials including poems, plays, novels, and artistic and illustrative material.... [W]hat this book does exceptionally well is highlight and hold in balance the many competing discourses that surrounded Cashmere and imitation shawls in Britain during this period. Drawing upon the literary shawl as both a locus, representative, and even occasionally a tool of empire, Choudhury’s engaging monograph sets up and excitingly explores "the interface between Britain and India during the colonial period."
*British Association for Victorian Studies Newsletter*

A compelling analysis of the historical and literary significance of the shawl in British culture from the eighteenth through the early twentieth centuries. . . . A well written, thoroughly researched, and engaging monograph that will surely be useful to a wide range of audiences, particularly to scholars working on nineteenth-century Britain and British India.
*Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies*

Suchitra Choudhury has taught me to pay close attention to any mention of a shawl in the literature of the long nineteenth century, and perhaps that is one of the highest types of praise a scholar can offer a colleague—to say that she has changed how one approaches and interprets texts. . . . This book will be of interest to a wide variety of Victorianists, particularly those interested in fashion history, material culture, and postcolonial studies.
*Victorian Studies*

[A] must read for anyone interested in the cultural journeying of cashmere and paisley shawls. Every page is invested with attention to detail and the joy of Choudhury’s alchemic writing skills, breathing life into the shawl’s rich history and inherently powerful symbolism.
*Karen Louise Parker, Dress: The Journal of the Costume Society of America*

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