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My Publications Thus Far

  “The High Cost of Dancing: When the Indian Women’s Movement Went After the Devadasis.” Intercultural Communications and Creative Practice: Dance, Music and Women’s Cultural Identity. Ed. Laura B. Lengel. Westport, Conn. and London: Praeger, 2005. 121-140.

“In Search of the British Indian in British India: White Orphans, Kipling’s Kim, and Class in Colonial India.” Modern Asian Studies. 38.1 (Feb 2004): 227-251.

With Neil Brooks, editors. Literature and Racial Ambiguity. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2002.

"Tommy Atkins in India: Class Conflict and the British Raj." Kunapipi. 22.1 (2000): 95-105.

"The Politics of the Poor and the Limits of Feminist Individualism in Nayantara Sahgal’s Rich Like Us." Nayantara Saghal’s India: Passion, Politics, and History. Ed. Ralph J. Crane. Delhi: Sterling, 1997.

"The Missing Muslim Woman in Indo-Anglian Literature: Iqbalunnisa Hussain's Purdah and Polygamy." Perspectives on South Asia at the Threshold of the 21st Century. Ed. Reeta Chowdhari Tremblay. Montreal: Canadian Asian Studies Association, 1997. 141-51.

"Excavating the Expendable Working Classes in Duncan's The Imperialist." The Imperialist. by Sara Jeannette Duncan. Ed. Thomas E. Tausky. Ottawa: Tecumseh, 1997. 437-56.

Whose India? The Independence Struggle in British and Indian Fiction and History. Durham, North Carolina: Duke UP, 1996.

"Devadasi Defiance and The Man-eater of Malgudi." Journal of Commonwealth Literature. 29.1 (1994): 15-28.

"When the Middle Class is Not Enough: The Working-Class Subaltern and the Curriculum." Dalhousie Review. 74.2 (Summer 1994): 163-169.

"Sati, Satyagraha, and Swarnakumari Devi's `Mutiny'." Enriched by South Asia: Celebrating Twenty Five Years of Scholarship on South Asia in Canada. Eds. Elliot L. Tepper and John R. Wood. Montreal: CASA, 1994. 279-89.

"Devadasis--Didn't Fit West's Morals." Hinduism Today. January 1994. 16:1. 3.

"Charting the Anger of Indian Women Through Narayan’s Savitri." Modern Fiction Studies. 39.1 (Winter 1993): 113-130.

"`The Bride of His Country': Love, Marriage, and the Imperialist Paradox in the Indian Fiction of Sara Jeannette Duncan and Rudyard Kipling." ARIEL: A Review of International English Literature 21 (January 1990): 3-19.

Last updated September 2005.