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Mother India: Selections from the Controversial 1927 Text, Edited and with an Introduction by Mrinalini Sinha

Author: Katherine Mayo
Creator: Mrinalini Sinha
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Category: Book

Buy New: $60.00



New (3) Used (9) Collectible (1) from $4.08

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 3439064

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.8 x 1.2

ISBN: 0472097156
Dewey Decimal Number: 954.03
EAN: 9780472097159
ASIN: 0472097156

Publication Date: March 31, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 10 to 11 days

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  • Paperback - Mother India: Selections from the Controversial 1927 Text, Edited and with an Introduction by Mrinalini Sinha

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Mother India, a polemical attack against Indian self-rule written by U.S. historian Katherine Mayo, was met with a storm of controversy when it was published in 1927. The controversy generated still reverberates and thus is still worth revisiting, some fifty years after Indian independence. In responding to Mayo's argument laid out in Mother India, the leaders of the national movement and the independent women's movement in India laid the foundations of an alliance that gave modern Indian nationalism its distinctive character.
Mrinalini's Sinha's edition provides selections of this controversial book and commentary on the Mother India phenomenon. It also reprints a range of responses from Mayo's contemporaries. Sinha's edition works to locate the book and the controversy it incited in the context of U.S. domestic, British Imperial, and Indian nationalist politics. Unlike previous editions, Sinha's examines the history of cultural feminisms and the relations between women's movements in the United States, Britain, and India; the examination of these different movements reveals intriguing insights into the nature of the varied reactions to Mayo's book. The edition includes several formerly obscure contemporary responses to Mother India from representatives of the women's movement and of the anti-caste movement in India.
Intended as a tool for students and teachers alike, this book will be an important text in the field of women's studies, cultural studies, political science, history, and religion, among others.
Mrinalini Sinha is Associate Professor of History, Southern Illinois University. She is the author of Colonial Masculinity: The 'Manly Englishman' and the 'Effeminate Bengali' in the Late Nineteenth Century.



Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars An excellent introduction to `Mother India'   January 11, 2007
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Immediately after the publication of Mayo's book in 1927, a number of books were written by Indians as a reply to Mayo's scurrilous work, `Mother India'. Mrinalini Sinha's introduction is written from research standpoint where she tracing back in history and explaining the backdrop of Mayo's work. She also studies both the positive and negative impact the book had on colonial India. This book gives lot of additional information and references to one who is looking for a detailed study of the social issues of colonial India, customs and practices of Hindus, sources and reliability of the data that Mayo used in her book. Also, additional comments have been given at the bottom of pages for Mayo's claims, wherever possible.

In tracing back Mayo's career, however, one cannot see her anti-third world sentiments. She had been an average journalist and her life before or after the publication of `Mother India' does not show her antipathy or affinity towards third world countries. This leads one to believe that her agenda was enforced by external sources, namely political.

One would not wonder if this book has been used by the United States government as an introductory book on India until 70s especially when considering America's intolerance and knowledge on the east!

Sinha's introduction and comments are invaluable source of information for scholars, historians and even politicians alike. This book does not contain the full text of Mayo's `Mother India' (don't know why the book is published this way, may be with a business mind), for which one has to read one of the available editions of Mayo's original publication.




5 out of 5 stars Reading propaganda in its context   January 24, 2003
 4 out of 6 found this review helpful

This is a great take on the original "Mother India" written in the 1920s by Katherine Mayo. Sinha notes that Mayo's book, in spite of being one of the most viciously racist and imperialistic (and badly written) books ever, served as a guide for US policy makers until the 1980s! Going by Sinha's analysis, it's pretty clear that Mayo was more demagogue than scholar, and very interesting that lots of people cared about her views. That alone makes it worth examining what Mayo said. Sinha takes a good look at (a) Mayo's career and political leanings, (b) new research about her sources of "information" about India, (c) possible sources of funding for her book, and (d) what Indians at the time had to say about it. Through all this, Sinha does a great job of contextualizing Mayo's book, and provokes readers to think about the powerful seduction that oversimplified (dis)information and propaganda hold for the uncritical mind. In the first part of the book, Sinha presents background and analysis. The rest of the book consists of excerpts from Mayo's original text.


4 out of 5 stars Non-PC? -- but still an interesting book   September 19, 2000
 8 out of 13 found this review helpful

Katherine Mayo originally published her book, _Mother India_, in 1927, when not only was there still a "British India", but there were still people who thought it was a good thing. This review is based on that original work. I do not know how this new paperback edition has been edited, but since "Mrinalini Sinha (Editor)" has been added to the authorship, I assume there are some differences. In the original work, Mayo, no fan of Mr. Gandhi, outlined in well-documented detail the problems of India at that time (child marriages, health problems caused by lack of hygiene, caste rigidities, the economy, etc.) and presented solutions from a western point of view. She was also no fan of Hinduism, but there is no attack in the book on the religion per se, only on the negative effects that she felt flowed from it. She is a good writer and the book is very easy to read. The political parts were not as interesting to me as the parts about the social problems. Hopefully the editor deleted some of the more tedious passages of old politics. For the most part, I found it fascinating.

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