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ID088484
Title ProperContesting Calcutta Canons
Other Title Informationissues of gender and mofussil in the Naxalbari movement in West Bengal (1967-1975)
LanguageENG
AuthorRoy, Mallarika Sinha
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Naxalbari movement, a radical Maoist movement, marks a significant moment in the postcolonial history of West Bengal, as well as in the larger context of India. Beginning as an armed peasant movement in 1967 in the Naxalbari area of northern West Bengal, the movement soon was spread in different districts of West Bengal and several provinces of India. Even though it has been one of the well-studied political and social events in postcolonial West Bengal, the gender dimension, particularly the history of women's participation, remains neglected in the historiography of the movement. A critical review from the point of view of gender requires contextualisation of gender relations according to class, ethnicity, spatial locations, and cultural environments of men and women Naxalites. Through a discussion of the centrality of Calcutta - the metropolitan centre - in the dominant memory and history of Naxalbari, I argue that activists from mofussil or non-metropolitan backgrounds, especially non-metropolitan women, have remained marginally represented, in spite of their significant contribution. This essay re-reads the movement with new information and insight, gained principally through women's words
`In' analytical NoteContemporary South Asia Vol. 17, No. 2; Jun 2009; p159-174
Journal SourceContemporary South Asia Vol. 17, No. 2; Jun 2009; p159-174
Key WordsNaxalbari ;  Gender ;  Mofussil ;  Dominant Memory ;  History