Situated at the intersection of law and literature, nineteenth-century
studies and post-colonialism, Colonial Law in India and the Victorian
Imagination draws on original archival research to shed new light on
Victorian literature. Each chapter explores the relationship between the
shared cultural logic of law and literature, and considers how this
inflected colonial sociality. Leila Neti approaches the legal archive in
a distinctly literary fashion, attending to nuances of voice, character,
diction and narrative, while also tracing elements of fact and
procedure, reading the case summaries as literary texts to reveal the
common turns of imagination that motivated both fictional and legal
narratives. What emerges is an innovative political analytic for
understanding the entanglements between judicial and cultural norms in
Britain and the colony, bridging the critical gap in how law and
literature interact within the colonial arena.