Modern Asian Studies
Volume 42, Issue 4, 2008, Pages 629-671

Race, sex and slavery: 'Forced labour' in central Asia and Afghanistan in the early 19th century (Article)

Hopkins B.D.*
  • a University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, United Kingdom

Abstract

The word 'slavery' conjures images of cruelty, racial bigotry and economic exploitation associated with the plantation complex crucial to the Atlantic trading economy from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. Yet this was only one manifestation of practices of human bondage. This article examines the practice of 'slavery' in a very different context, looking at Central Asia, Afghanistan and the Punjab in the early nineteenth century. Here, bondage was largely a social institution with economic ramifications, in contrast to its Atlantic counterpart. Slavery served a social, and often sexual function in many of these societies, with the majority of slaves being female domestic servants and concubines. Its victims were often religiously, rather than racially defined, although bondage was a cross-confessional phenomenon. The practice continued to be widespread throughout the region into the early twentieth century. © 2007 Cambridge University Press.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

slavery nineteenth century Afghanistan Punjab [India] Eurasia race India Central Asia prostitution twentieth century South Asia social history Asia

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-44949244109&doi=10.1017%2fS0026749X0600271X&partnerID=40&md5=ee2886d13f7fbf0707f12de971a01df9

DOI: 10.1017/S0026749X0600271X
ISSN: 0026749X
Cited by: 11
Original Language: English