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Community, Gender, and Violence - Subaltern Studies XI (Paperback, New)
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Community, Gender, and Violence - Subaltern Studies XI (Paperback, New)
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In its early phase, "Subaltern Studies" dealt extensively with the
issue of community and violence in the context of peasant
uprisings. Once the problems of peasant involvement in the modern
politics of the nation were subjected to the same critical
scrutiny, complexities in that relationship began to emerge. A new
dimension was introduced when gender and national politics came to
be taken seriously and in this volume the whole range of new issues
raised by the relations between community, gender and violence are
addressed. The question of women and the nation, especially among
minorities, features strongly in this work. Qadri Ismail examines
the claims of Tamil nationalism in Sri Lanka from the standpoint of
the Southern Tamil woman; Aamir Mufti looks not at the familiar
gendered figure of the nation as mother but, from the standpoint of
the rejected minority, at the brutalized prostitute; while
Tejaswini Niranjana writes on the "new woman" in contemporary
Indian cinema. Further chapters look at women and minorities in the
context of the law: Flavia Agnes examines the colonial and
nationalist histories of the Hindu law of marriage and women's
property, Nivedita Menon critically reviews the Indian debate over
the universal civil code, and David Scott discusses, with an eye to
Sri Lanka, the concept of minority rights within modern theories of
citizenship. The issue of violence is taken up by Satish Deshpande
in his study of the imagined space within which the new Hindu Right
seeks to assert its dominance, and by Pradeep Jeganathan in his
exploration of violence in the cultivation of masculinity. In her
conclusion, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak considers the position
within a globalized economic space of the "new subaltern" - the
Third World labouring woman.
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