Coolie Woman is a personal journey for Gaiutra Bahadur, and an important one if we are to discuss histories of slavery and indentured labour. The book is the author’s quest to find out details of her great-grandmother’s story – a woman who was sent to work on the plantations in Africa, when slavery was abolished. The book is about the stories that come from what is recorded but also what’s missing. MT
"It is hard, in these glimpses, to escape the angle of sexual exploitation by figures of all ranks and races. In these archives of misconduct, the women appear resisting advances. Or, giving in to them. Or - in the eyes of many shipofficials - courting them. But the records also provide other views of the
women: on the deathbeds, giving birth, losing children, going mad, being driven to suicide, engaged in infanticide, rejecting or being rejected by shipboard husbands, demanding that husbands prove themselves, stowing away, crying, cursing, possibly in love and clearlyin anguish. Admittedly, the
reports present psyches aboard ship at their most awry, since they typically only mentioned a migrant when something had gone wrong."