In 1863, the Nawab Sikandar Begum, a Muslim woman and hereditary
ruler of the princely state of Bhopal in colonial India, traveled
to Mecca with a retinue of a thousand people. On returning, she
wrote this witty, acerbic account of her journey. In it, we glimpse
a process by which notions of the self could be redefined against a
Muslim "other" in the colonial environment. Sikandar Begum emerges
as a genuinely complex individual, crafting an image of herself as
an effective administrator, a loyal subject, and a good Muslim.
Siobhan Lambert-Hurley's critical introduction and afterword make
this edition a comprehensive resource on travel writing by South
Asian Muslim women, colonialism, and world history.
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