Indigenous Roots of Feminism: Culture, Subjectivity and Agency

Indigenous Roots of Feminism: Culture, Subjectivity and Agency

Author
Jasbir Jain
Language
English
Year
2011
Page
367
ISBN
978-8132104391
File Type
pdf
File Size
3.6 MiB

Review

Indigenous Roots of Feminism analyses the feminist movement in India in a historical perspective, free from the hangover of western concerns… Colour photos, a filmography on the representation of women in films and a comprehensive bibliography make the book complete and all-inclusive in its exploration of the native ancestry of Indian feminism. -- The Hindu

Dr Jasbir Jain’s book dwells on the origin of feminism in India…the book is free of the jargon that seems to be mandatory in many academic books today. It is entirely accessible to anyone with an interest in the subject. -- Mumbai Mirror


Product Description

This book is an exploration of the historical sources across India′s composite culture that have shaped the female self. Beginning with the Upanishads, it works with several foundational texts such as the epics and their retellings, Manusmriti, Natya Sastra and the literature of the Bhakti Movement in order to trace the histories of feminist questionings.
The constant interweaving of literary and social texts and the tracing of both continuities and disruptions across time and space enables a perception of the way in which individual struggles have merged with collective resistance and allowed a questioning of relationships, institutional frameworks, and traditional role models.

About the Author

Jasbir Jain is director of the Institute for Research in Interdisciplinary Studies (IRIS), Jaipur. Formerly of the University of Rajasthan, she has headed the Department of English and has worked in various capacities including the directorship of the Academic Staff College.

Jain has travelled extensively and has been the recipient of several awards. Amongst them are the Sahitya Akademi Fellowship as Writer in Residence (2009), UGC Fellow (2005–2007), Emeritus Fellow (2002–2004) and K.K. Birla Fellowship for Comparative Literature (1998–2000). Elected life-member of Clare Hall, Cambridge, she has also availed of the Fulbright Fellowship and of the American Council of Learned Societies. In 2008, the South Asia Literary Association conferred on her the SALA Award for her work in Feminist and South Asian Studies and her distinguished scholarship. Earlier in 2004, she was awarded the Indian Association of Canadian Studies (IACS) Award in recognition of her outstanding contribution to Canadian Studies. The American Association of Colleges and Universities nominated her a Global Fellow for 2003.

Her publications include three volumes on the Indian novel covering the period 1860–2000 and, interrogating the periodisation thrust on it, she went on to work on the connectivity across languages. Her current interests are in theory and narratology and in exploring traditions. Her recent work includes Gendered Realities and Beyond Postcolonialism: The Dreams and Realities of a Nation and a forthcoming work is The Writer as Critic.

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