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

Mar 25, 2026
Satya Shikha Chakraborty, Associate Professor of History who studies gender and colonial South Asia, explores ayahs — South Asian nannies/maids — and their role in shaping racialized domestic norms. She discusses archives, travel to Britain and abandonment, caste and medical advice, elite domestic modernity, and links to contemporary domestic labor. Multiple short, vivid historical threads illuminate caregiving and power.
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INSIGHT

Aya Archetype As Moral Pillar Of Empire

  • The Aya archetype functioned as moral labor that validated British imperial rule by portraying desexualized, loyal brown caregivers devoted to British families.
  • Chakraborty links mutiny fiction and paintings after 1857 showing ayahs protecting British children as emotional proof of colonial moral authority.
INSIGHT

Colonialism Created The Desexualized Aya Role

  • The colonial Aya emerged when the East India Company shifted from interracial intimacies to promoting British marital racial purity, creating a desexualized caregiver role.
  • Chakraborty traces the term 'ayah' to Portuguese and shows painters using chiaroscuro and Indian yellow to racialize ayahs visually.
ANECDOTE

Ayahs' Petitions Reveal Abuse And Exploitation

  • Archival petitions reveal ayahs' real vulnerabilities: sexual abuse, unpaid wages, and forced long-term detention abroad.
  • Examples include Juhurun abused in Mauritius and Joni detained in Britain for six years without promised pay.
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