New Books in History

Satya Shikha Chakraborty, "Colonial Caregivers: Ayahs and the Gendered History of Race and Caste in British India" (Cambridge UP, 2025)

Mar 26, 2026
Satya Shikha Chakraborty, Associate Professor of History who studies gendered domestic labor, race, caste, and empire. She traces the ayah archetype as a desexualized caregiver that bolstered imperial moral claims. Short sections cover ayahs in imperial imagination, legal and visual archives, journeys to Britain, caste and colonial medicine, and links to contemporary domestic labor.
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INSIGHT

Aya Archetype As Moral Support For Empire

  • The Aya archetype morally validated British imperial rule by embodying desexualized, devoted brown womanhood.
  • Mutiny fictions and paintings after 1857 depict ayahs protecting British children, offering emotional comfort and reinforcing imperial whiteness.
INSIGHT

Aya Emergence Linked To Racial Boundary Work

  • The Aya emerged as a colonial innovation to maintain racial and sexual boundaries as the East India Company shifted to territorial rule.
  • British medical ideas about tropical weakness and South Asian women's hardiness made ayahs essential caregivers for white families.
ANECDOTE

Petitions Reveal Abuse And Broken Promises

  • Juhurun and Joni's petitions reveal sexual abuse and detention despite cultural sentimentalization of ayahs.
  • Juhurun returned from indenture in Mauritius after reporting sexual assault; Joni was detained in Britain for six years and denied promised compensation.
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