This book presents an overview of the varied experiences and
representations of motherhood in India from ancient to modern
times. The thrust of the arguments made by the various contributors
is that the centrality of motherhood as an ideology in a woman 's
life is manufactured. This is demonstrated by analysing various
institutional structures of society language, religion, media, law
and technology.
The articles in this book are chronologically arranged, tracing
the different stages that motherhood as a concept has traversed in
India from goddess worship to nationalism, to being a vehicle of
reproduction of the sexual division of labour and the inheritance
of property via the male-line. Underlying these stages are the
dialectics between them that have been facilitated by agents such
as the state the ultimate controller of a woman 's reproductive
powers. The feminist critique of essentialising the role of a woman
has been employed to deconstruct and humanise the experiences and
lives of mothers.
This anthology therefore attempts to initiate a meaningful and
sensitive engagement with issues pertaining to a woman 's autonomy
over her body and her role also as a mother.
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