1st Edition

Imperial Leather Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest

By Anne Mcclintock Copyright 1995
    464 Pages
    by Routledge

    464 Pages
    by Routledge

    Imperial Leather chronicles the dangerous liaisons between gender, race and class that shaped British imperialism and its bloody dismantling. Spanning the century between Victorian Britain and the current struggle for power in South Africa, the book takes up the complex relationships between race and sexuality, fetishism and money, gender and violence, domesticity and the imperial market, and the gendering of nationalism within the zones of imperial and anti-imperial power.

    I. Empire of the Home  1. The Lay of the Land  2. "Massa and Maids  3. Imperial Leather  4. Psychoanalysis, Race and Female Fetish  II. Double Crossings  5. Soft-Soaping Empire  6. The White Family of Man  7. Olive Schreiner  III. Dismantling the Master's House  8. The Scandal of Hybridity  9. "Azikwelwa" (We Will Not Ride)  10. No Longer in a Future Heading

    Biography

    Anne McClintock is an Associate Professor of English at Columbia University, and a SSRC-MacArthur Fellow. She is the author of monographs on Simone DeBeauvoir and Olive Schreiner, and has written for a number of publications on issues of gender and sexuality, including Critical Inquiry, Boundary 11, The Village Voice, and The New York Times Book Review.

    "The author and Routledge are to be congratulated on a big, beautiful book that many students of the history of sexuality will find alluring." -- Journal of the History of Sexuality
    "Imperial Leather is what an academic book ought to be: intelligent, informed, socially committed, engaged, and engaging." -- Women's Review of Books
    "Imperial Leather is a wonderful book." -- Women's Review of Books
    "McClintock's magisterial study...is a daring articulation of the race-class-gender triad." -- Choice
    "Anne McClintock's Imperial Leather takes a prominent place among a number of recent works...that question the relegation of the imperial enterprise to the back benches of the Victorian sensibility...Ms. McClintock's astute reading of novels, diaries, and advertisements, among other sources, demonstrates how images of domestic life can be incorporated into an ideology of imperial domination." -- The New York Times Book Review
    "Imperial Leather is a very passionately written book, and the reader cannot help but be involved in the various texts that McClintock freely uses. Nothing escapes her hard, penetrating gaze...The work is thoughtful and well researched. I highly recomend it." -- Journal of Carribean Studies
    "This is a big book, in every sense of the word: big format, big ideas, big aim." -- The Canadian Historical Review
    "Lucidly written, wide-ranging in its scope, supple and rigorous in its analysis, and impressive in its consistent theorization of gender in relation to other axes of power, Imperial Leather is a major contribution to materialist feminist scholarship." -- Signs
    "Engaging and frequently brilliant." -- Victorian Studies