Something went wrong
Please try again
An Empire of Touch
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
29 December 2020

In today’s world of unequal globalization, Bangladesh has drawn international attention for the spate of factory disasters that have taken the lives of numerous garment workers, mostly young women. The contemporary garment industry—and the labor organizing pushing back—draws on a long history of gendered labor division and exploitation in East Bengal, the historical antecedent of Bangladesh. Yet despite the centrality of women’s labor to anticolonial protest and postcolonial state-building, historiography has struggled with what appears to be its absence from the archive.
Poulomi Saha offers an innovative account of women’s political labor in East Bengal over more than a century, one that suggests new ways to think about textiles and the gendered labors of their making. An Empire of Touch argues that women have articulated—in writing, in political action, in stitching—their own desires in their own terms. They produce narratives beyond women’s empowerment and independence as global and national projects; they refuse critical pronouncements of their own subjugation. Saha follows the historical traces of how women have claimed their own labor, contending that their political commitments are captured in the material objects of their manufacture. Her analysis of the production of historical memory through and by the bodies of women spans British colonialism and American empire, anticolonial nationalism to neoliberal globalization, depicting East Bengal between development economics and postcolonial studies. Through a material account of text and textile, An Empire of Touch crafts a new narrative of gendered political labor under empire.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Colonialism & Post-Colonialism, HISTORY / Asia / South / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Women in Politics, LITERARY CRITICISM / Feminist
— Mrinalini Sinha, author of Specters of Mother India: The Global Restructuring of an Empire
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Reading the Body Politic
1. Virgin Suicides
Part II: The Fetish of Nationalism
2. The Fetish Touch
3. Oceanic Feelings
Part III: International Basket Case
4. Archive Asylum
5. Machine Made
Epilogue
Glossary
Notes
Bibliography
Index