The Currency of Kinship: Trading Families and Trading on Family in Colonial French India

Files

TR Number

Date

2014

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Johns Hopkins Univ Press

Abstract

In the French colony of Pondichéry, French and local actors alike drew on the shared idiom of kinship to strategically advance their political and commercial agendas. Recent scholarship has shown that the structures of family underlay early modern European state building and imperial expansion. This essay deploys this insight in the colonial context, to examine how indigenous families in the Tamil region entered into the European colonial project. For native commercial brokers, involvement with European newcomers could actually strengthen local family ties. Simultaneously, French employees of the Compagnie des Indes were eager to insert themselves into Tamil networks and did so by deploying public and inscribed performances of kinship.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Agmon, D. (2014). The Currency of Kinship: Trading Families and Trading on Family in Colonial French India. Eighteenth-Century Studies 47(2), 137-155. doi: 10.1353/ecs.2014.0008