From portrayals of African women's bodies in early modern European travel accounts to the relation between celibacy
and Indian nationalism to the fate of the Korean ''comfort women'' forced into prostitution by the occupying Japanese
army during the Second World War--the essays collected in Bodies in Contact demonstrate how a focus on the body
as a site of cultural encounter provides essential insights into world history. Together these essays reveal the
''body as contact zone'' as a powerful analytic rubric for interpreting the mechanisms and legacies of colonialism
and illuminating how attention to gender alters understandings of world history. Rather than privileging the operations
of the Foreign Office or gentlemanly capitalists, these historical studies render the home, the street, the school,
the club, and the marketplace visible as sites of imperial ideologies.
Bodies in Contact brings together important scholarship on colonial gender studies gathered from journals around
the world. Breaking from approaches to world history as the history of ''the West and the rest,'' the contributors
offer a multi-centered perspective. They examine aspects of imperial regimes including the Ottoman, Mughal, Soviet,
British, Han, and Spanish, over six hundred years--from the fifteenth century through the mid-twentieth. Discussing
subjects as diverse as slavery and travel, ecclesiastical colonialism and military occupation, marriage and property,
nationalism and football, immigration and temperance, Bodies in Contact puts women, gender, and sexuality squarely
at the center of the ''master narratives'' of imperialism and world history.