Durba Mitra is a historian of modern South Asia. She specializes in its social and intellectual history, as well as histories of sexuality and the history of science and medicine. At the Forum, she will be focusing on her book manuscript, Sex and The New Science of Society in Colonial India. In this work, she investigates how the figure of the sexually deviant woman, often depicted as the prostitute, was central in the making of a new sociological imagination in eastern India in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Previously, she was a postdoctoral fellow at Bowdoin College and a Fulbright scholar to India.
Durba Mitra
Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Humanities
2015—2016 Forum on Sex
Durba Mitra
Assistant Professor, South Asia, History, Fordham University
Ph.D., Emory University, 2013
Sex and The New Science of Society in Colonial India
This project suggests female sexuality was key to the making of social and political thought in eastern India in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Mitra considers the figure of the sexually deviant woman, often depicted as the prostitute, in a range of sites - law, science, sociology, and literature. Sex and The New Science of Society explores how colonial authorities and Bengali reformers invoked claims to “scientificity” about female sex in the constitution of new legal codes, modes of evidence, and social theories about Indian society.