Abstract:
The figure of the colonial woman is often incarcerated in images of passivity and 
immobility in studies of Indian colonial archives. However, travels by Indian women to 
England during the high colonial period unsettle such views and suggest that women’s 
colonial experiences were complex and layered. This dissertation aims to address such gaps 
in current scholarship by recovering the voices of the Indian female travellers of the 
colonial period to form an epistemology of gendered colonial experiences. Using the lens 
of Judith Butler’s gender theory of performativity, along with postcolonial discourse 
analysis, I examined the travel narratives of eleven female colonial travellers  to gain 
insights into female colonial subject formation. A close reading of the selected texts shows 
that women had to negotiate with the demands of discourses of gender, colonialism and 
anti-colonial nationalism as they self-fashioned their identities. Consequently, they enacted 
multiple roles of feminine, modern, mobile, nationalist, cosmopolitan and sociable selves 
as part of their strategy to mitigate the transgressions inherent in travel and to conform to 
normative gender conventions and secure social approval. The travellers’ presentations of 
these themes are presented in separate chapters.  Additionally, the analysis of these travel 
narratives produces a mapping of the emotional contours and cosmopolitan dimensions of 
Indian female travels. By drawing on recent theoretical work on travel writing, 
postcolonialism and gender studies as well as analysis of recent female travel writing, my 
study offers an interdisciplinary perspective on Indian colonial women’s travel narratives 
that will hopefully widen the scope of postcolonial studies and women’s travel writing as 
well as contribute to women’s writing from the colonial period.