Domesticity and Power in the Early Mughal World /
- 1st ed.
- New Delhi Cambridge University Press, 2005.
- 241 ill. ; 24 cm.
In a fascinating and innovative study Ruby Lal explores domestic life and the place of women in the Mughal court of the sixteenth century. Challenging traditional orientalist interpretations of the haram that have portrayed a domestic world of seclusion and sexual exploitation the author reveals a complex society where noble men and women negotiated their everyday life and public-political affairs in the 'inner' chambers as well as the 'outer' courts. Using Ottoman and Safavid histories as a counterpoint she demonstrates the richness ambiguity and particularity of the Mughal haram which was pivotal in the transition to institutionalisation and imperial excellence.
1. Introduction; 2. A genealogy of the Mughal haram; 3. The question of the archive: the challenge of a princess's memoir; 4. The making of Mughal court society; 5. Where was the haram in a peripatetic world?; 6. Settled sacred and all-powerful: the new regime under Akbar; 7. Settled sacred and 'incarcerated': the imperial haram; 8. Conclusion.
9780521145541
Courtesans Royal households Domestic relations Social role