‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial Conquest

This essay illuminates the elusive and messy archives of an unusual presence in the Victorian court, that of Princess Victoria Gouramma (1841‒1864), daughter of the deposed King of Coorg, Chikka Virarajendra and goddaughter and namesake of Queen Victoria. The messy and circuitous archives of Gouramm...

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Main Author: Chandrica Barua
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2023-03-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12760
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author Chandrica Barua
author_facet Chandrica Barua
author_sort Chandrica Barua
collection DOAJ
description This essay illuminates the elusive and messy archives of an unusual presence in the Victorian court, that of Princess Victoria Gouramma (1841‒1864), daughter of the deposed King of Coorg, Chikka Virarajendra and goddaughter and namesake of Queen Victoria. The messy and circuitous archives of Gouramma reveal the story of a colonized, racialized, exteriorized colonial subject becoming an ornamental interior of the Empire. Gouramma had found herself in 1850s England, displaced from her homeland and culture, anglicized and Christianized, pruned and displayed as the glorious civilizational project of the Empire, and yet never truly being an inhabitant of Victorian interiors. Queen Victoria’s royal court, within which Gouramma’s material and ephemeral presence is articulated, was fashioned as a sanctuary from the ‘savage’ and ‘primitive’ colony of Gouramma’s past. In this unique instantiation of imperial conquest founded upon care and rehabilitation, we are prompted to rethink not only the colonial civilizational agenda but also the contentious intimacies amongst the Empire and its colonies. Through an analysis of the recorded and recollected interactions between the Queen and her Indian ward, this essay charts out the emergence of a maternal politics—care and conquest—that wielded a specific epistemological, ontological power and an insidious psychic conquest of personhood.
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spelling doaj-art-fa59f85648874b4a82955641a0f056d52025-01-30T10:22:40ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492023-03-019710.4000/cve.12760‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial ConquestChandrica BaruaThis essay illuminates the elusive and messy archives of an unusual presence in the Victorian court, that of Princess Victoria Gouramma (1841‒1864), daughter of the deposed King of Coorg, Chikka Virarajendra and goddaughter and namesake of Queen Victoria. The messy and circuitous archives of Gouramma reveal the story of a colonized, racialized, exteriorized colonial subject becoming an ornamental interior of the Empire. Gouramma had found herself in 1850s England, displaced from her homeland and culture, anglicized and Christianized, pruned and displayed as the glorious civilizational project of the Empire, and yet never truly being an inhabitant of Victorian interiors. Queen Victoria’s royal court, within which Gouramma’s material and ephemeral presence is articulated, was fashioned as a sanctuary from the ‘savage’ and ‘primitive’ colony of Gouramma’s past. In this unique instantiation of imperial conquest founded upon care and rehabilitation, we are prompted to rethink not only the colonial civilizational agenda but also the contentious intimacies amongst the Empire and its colonies. Through an analysis of the recorded and recollected interactions between the Queen and her Indian ward, this essay charts out the emergence of a maternal politics—care and conquest—that wielded a specific epistemological, ontological power and an insidious psychic conquest of personhood.https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12760genderarchiveempirecareconquest
spellingShingle Chandrica Barua
‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial Conquest
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
gender
archive
empire
care
conquest
title ‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial Conquest
title_full ‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial Conquest
title_fullStr ‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial Conquest
title_full_unstemmed ‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial Conquest
title_short ‘Poor little princess’: Queen Victoria’s Court as a Site of Imperial Conquest
title_sort poor little princess queen victoria s court as a site of imperial conquest
topic gender
archive
empire
care
conquest
url https://journals.openedition.org/cve/12760
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