Women as subjects : South Asian histories
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Women as subjects : South Asian histories
(Feminist issues)
University Press of Virginia, 1994
- : pbk.
Available at / 7 libraries
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Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Universityグローバル専攻
: pbk.COE-SA||367.225||Kum||0009347900093479
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
"Women as Subjects" considers the changing identity and status of women in India today - how they view themselves and how they are viewed - through the current work of seven scholars: anthropologists, historians and sociologists from India, the United Kingdom and the United States. These essays, combined with Nita Kumar's substantial theoretical introduction, illustrate the overall problem of women's subjectivity and serve to question, modify and adapt Western-based feminist theory and Eurocentric postmodern theory, building a bridge both to non-South Asian feminist work and to nonfeminist South Asian work.
Table of Contents
- Women's Speech Genres, Kinship and the Contradiction, Gloria Goodwin Raheja
- Power and Violence - Hindu Images of Female Fury, Ann Grodzins Gold
- Between Two Worlds - Self-Construction and Self-Identity in the Writings of Three 19th-century Indian Christian Women, Leslie E. Flemming
- Other Voices, Other Rooms - the View from the Zenana, Gail Minault
- Killing My Heart's Desire - Education and Female Autonomy in Rural North India, Patricia Jeffery and Roger Jeffery
- Gender and Politics in Garhwal, William Sax
- Oranges for the Girls or the Half-Known Story of the Education of Girls in 20th-century Banaras, Nita Kimar.
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