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In literature and popular imagination, the Bauls of India and
Bangladesh are characterized as musical mystics: orange-clad nomads
of both Hindu and Muslim backgrounds. They wander the countryside
and entertain with their passionate singing and unusual behavior,
and they are especially well-known for their evocative songs, which
challenge the caste system and sectarianism prevalent in South
Asia.
Although Bauls claim to value women over men, little is known about
the individual views and experiences of Baul women. Based on
ethnographic research in both the predominantly Hindu context of
West Bengal (India) and the Muslim country of Bangladesh, this book
explores the everyday lives of Baul women. Lisa Knight examines the
contradictory expectations regarding Baul women: on the one hand,
the ideal of a group unencumbered by societal restraints and
concerns and, on the other, the real constraints of feminine
respectability that seemingly curtail women's mobility and public
performances.
Knight demonstrates that Baul women respond to these conflicting
expectations in various ways, sometimes adopting and other times
subverting local gendered norms to craft meaningful lives. More so
than their male counterparts, Baul women feel encumbered by norms.
But rather than seeing Baul women's normative behavior as
indicative of their conformity to gendered roles (and, therefore,
failures as Bauls), Knight argues that these women creatively draw
on societal expectations to transcend their social limits and
create new paths.
In literature and popular imagination, the Bauls of India and
Bangladesh are characterized as musical mystics: orange-clad nomads
of both Hindu and Muslim backgrounds. They wander the countryside
and entertain with their passionate singing and unusual behavior,
and they are especially well-known for their evocative songs, which
challenge the caste system and sectarianism prevalent in South
Asia.
Although Bauls claim to value women over men, little is known about
the individual views and experiences of Baul women. Based on
ethnographic research in both the predominantly Hindu context of
West Bengal (India) and the Muslim country of Bangladesh, this book
explores the everyday lives of Baul women. Lisa Knight examines the
contradictory expectations regarding Baul women: on the one hand,
the ideal of a group unencumbered by societal restraints and
concerns and, on the other, the real constraints of feminine
respectability that seemingly curtail women's mobility and public
performances.
Knight demonstrates that Baul women respond to these conflicting
expectations in various ways, sometimes adopting and other times
subverting local gendered norms to craft meaningful lives. More so
than their male counterparts, Baul women feel encumbered by norms.
But rather than seeing Baul women's normative behavior as
indicative of their conformity to gendered roles (and, therefore,
failures as Bauls), Knight argues that these women creatively draw
on societal expectations to transcend their social limits and
create new paths.
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