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The racial hand in the Victorian imagination
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ISBN: 1316391051 131639185X 1316392252 1316392457 1316392058 1316337502 1316391655 1107116589 1107538912 1316389855 9781316337509 9781107116580 9781107538917 Year: 2015 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

The hands of colonized subjects - South Asian craftsmen, Egyptian mummies, harem women, and Congolese children - were at the crux of Victorian discussions of the body that tried to come to terms with the limits of racial identification. While religious, scientific, and literary discourses privileged hands as sites of physiognomic information, none of these found plausible explanations for what these body parts could convey about ethnicity. As compensation for this absence, which might betray the fact that race was not actually inscribed on the body, fin-de-siècle narratives sought to generate models for how non-white hands might offer crucial means of identifying and theorizing racial identity. They removed hands from a holistic corporeal context and allowed them to circulate independently from the body to which they originally belonged. Severed hands consequently served as 'human tools' that could be put to use in a number of political, aesthetic, and ideological contexts.

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