Warrior Gentlemen: ‘Gurkhas’ in the Western Imagination
Synopsis
Of late, there has been a growing interest in how non-western peoples have been and continue to be depicted in the literatures of the west. In anthropology, attention has focused on the range of literary devices employed in ethnographic texts to distance and exoticise the subjects of discourse, and ultimately contribute to their subordination. This study eschews the tendency to regard virtually all depictions of non-western ‘others’ as amenable to the same kinds of ‘orientalist’ analysis, and argues that the portrayals found in such writings must be examined in their particular historical and political settings. These themes are explored by analysing the voluminous literature by military authors who have written and continue to write about the ‘Gurkhas’, those legendary soldiers from Nepal who have served in Britain’s imperial and post-imperial armies for more than two centuries. The author discovers that, instead of exoticising them, the military writers find in their subjects the quintessential virtues of the European officers themselves: the Gurkhas appear as warriors and gentlemen. However, the author does not rest here: utilising a wealth of literary, historical, ethnographic sources and the results of his own fieldwork, he investigates the wider social and cultural contexts in which the European chroniclers of the Gurkhas have been natured. This book will appeal to a wide readership, academic and non-academic, such as students of anthropology, literature, cultural studies, military and colonial history, South Asian studies and readers generally interested in militaria.
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