Mitch Fraas
Associate Scholar
2013—2014 Forum on Violence
Mitch Fraas
SAS Postdoctoral Fellow
History, Penn Library
Representing Violence in Early Colonial Indian Courtrooms
The introduction of British systems of legal procedure into the colonial port cities of Madras, Bombay, and Calcutta in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries necessitated the use of new languages by the residents of those cities in which to narrate their everyday lives. Given the role of law as forum for airing of grievances and seeking restitution or retribution, people from all manner of cultural, religious, and geographic backgrounds appeared in the new British courts to tell stories of violence and harms done to them. What emerged from this experience of law-in-action were a set of often conflicting narratives and translations about violence which quickly became driving tropes of a new hybrid legal culture.