Coolie Woman, Gaiutra Bahadur
Coolie Woman, Gaiutra Bahadur
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

Coolie Woman
The Odyssey of Indenture

Author: Gaiutra Bahadur

Narrator: Gaiutra Bahadur

Unabridged: 13 hr 51 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 02/27/2024


Synopsis

SHORTLISTED FOR THE ORWELL PRIZE

In 1903, a young woman sailed from India to Guiana as a "coolie"—the British name for indentured laborers who replaced the newly emancipated slaves on sugar plantations all around the world. Pregnant and traveling alone, this woman, like so many coolies, disappeared into history. In Coolie Woman, her great-granddaughter Gaiutra Bahadur embarks on a journey into the past to find her. Traversing three continents and trawling through countless colonial archives, Bahadur excavates not only her great-grandmother's story but also the repressed history of some quarter of a million other coolie women, shining a light on their complex lives.

Shunned by society, and sometimes in mortal danger, many coolie women were either runaways, widows, or outcasts. Many of them left husbands and families behind to migrate alone in epic sea voyages—traumatic "middle passages"—only to face a life of hard labor, dismal living conditions, and sexual exploitation. Coolie Woman is a meditation on survival, a gripping story of a double diaspora—from India to the West Indies in one century, Guyana to the United States in the next—that is at once a search for one's roots and an exploration of gender and power, peril and opportunity.

About Gaiutra Bahadur

Gaiutra Bahadur is an American journalist. She has written for the New York Times Book Review, Dissent, The New York Review of Books, VQR, Lapham's Quarterly, The Nation, Boston Review, The Los Angeles Review of Books, and Ms., among other publications.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Alok

Bahadur’s Coolie Woman is an intimate and harrowing work that braids the personal with the political, the historical with the present, narrating stories of Indian indentured women across three continents. So often the narrative of Indian migration is dominated by class/caste privileged experience of......more

Goodreads review by Manjul

4.5 stars Gaiutra Bahadur does a remarkable job in tracing the story of her great grandmother Sujaria, an indentured single woman who traveled from India in 1903 to work on a sugar plantation in Guyana. The narrative is a multi-layered exploration of exile, colonialism, gender dynamics in a world of......more

Goodreads review by Maia

As a person of Guyanese origin, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It was an incredibly engrossing and wonderful historical piece. I found this book to be thought provoking and highly recommend it.......more

Goodreads review by Chand

Outstanding book, at a superficial level its kind of an anthropological who-dun-it of looking back towards the Indian Diaspora in Br. Guyana from the indentured laborers imported there by the Brits, but at a deeper level, its about the immigrants angst, the forging of a sense of identity and the ins......more