Disiplining Coolies
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"The early years of the East Indian Indentureship system in the Caribbean experimented on 'coolie' laborers to work out a new regime of governing 'free' labor across the British Empire. Colonial Trinidad was one of the main sites for this experiment. This book foregrounds one of the earliest cases (1846) of punishment and occupational and physical cruelty against East Indian indentured laborers in Trinidad within this very early period of experimentation. It presents and analyses the full transcripts of an inquiry concerning the ill-treatment of 'coolie' laborers and the severe punishment and death of one laborer, Kunduppa, by a Scottish planter in Trinidad. Ironically, within the first year of this experiment with 'coolie' labor, the planter claimed that torture was a necessary tactic to indulge 'coolies' to work. Drawing on the concepts of discipline, governmentality, and Orientalism, the main argument of the manuscript is that within the early experimental period of Indentureship, the figure of the 'coolie' and disciplinary tactics of bodily torture were instrumental to redrafting and stabilizing the colonial governance of contract labor. It also argues that Crown investigations of 'coolie' abuse and death became occasions for establishing a new colonial order, in which the disciplinary powers of planters were curbed in the interest of protecting and 'caring' for the 'coolie' - a discourse that was crucial to re-inventing colonial rule as benevolent. As such, the author's analysis of colonial violence has crucial implications for critically re-thinking colonial liberalism and its legacies in the present"--
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- Open Author
Amar Wahab
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