2. To Have and to Hold: The Role of Marriage in Nonfiction Indenture Narratives
3.Tying the Knot: Early Depictions of Indenture
4.Tangled Up: Gendered Metaphors of Nation in Contemporary Indo-Caribbean Narratives
5. Family Ties: Embodiment of Female Laborers in the Poetry of Indenture
6. At the End of their Tether: Women Writing about Indenture
7. Conclusion: Loose Threads
Alison Klein is a Lecturer in International Writing at Duke University, USA. Her work has been published in the anthology Indo-Caribbean Feminist Thought: Genealogies, Theories, Enactments, and the journals Anthurium, South Asian Review, and The Journal of Commonwealth Literatures.