Christmas In Calcutta: Anglo-Indian Stories and Essays (9788126939893)
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Calcutta has one of the largest Anglo-Indian populations in the world. This is a community with members who occupy a wide range of socio-economic positions and who live a variety of lives that are always nuanced by their being Anglo-Indian. However, the community has been conveniently stereotyped by the media. Christmas in Calcutta goes beyond the stereotype and delves deep in this study of the Anglo-Indian community in Calcutta. The book comprises life stories, memoir pieces and essays on issues of contemporary interest. It is organised into four sections: ‘Identity’ focuses on the origins, characteristics and the constitutional definition of the community; ‘Faith’, or specifically the practice of Christianity, is the subject of study in the second section; ‘Education’ points out some of the failings of the education system for the community; and the final section, ‘Community Care’, talks about Anglo-Indian care and the consolidation of their community through this care. By drawing on the vital lives of real individuals, the author hopes that there is a change to the lens through which these people of India are viewed.
Robyn Andrews is Associate Professor in Social Anthropology and a Research Fellow at Massey University, New Zealand. Her research interest in Anglo-Indians began with her PhD, Being Anglo-Indian: Practices and Stories from Calcutta (2005), based on ethnographic research with Calcutta's Anglo-Indian community. She has continued her research involvement with the community with a shift in focus to other parts of India, studying the diaspora, ageing experiences and the place of religion and pilgrimage in Anglo-Indian lives. She is co-editor, along with Brent H. Otto, of the International Journal of Anglo-Indian Studies.