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ID105026
Title ProperPolygyny, family and Sharafat
Other Title Informationdiscourses amongst North Indian Muslim, circa 1870-1918
LanguageENG
AuthorAlam, Asiya
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)While historians of South Asia have examined in elaborate detail critiques of sati and child marriage in the Hindu community, a similar approach to Muslim familial reform also needs serious attention. By investigating discourses on the question of polygyny, this paper is an attempt in this direction. In the light of these discourses, the paper argues that polygyny, influenced by modern sensibilities of reform and social change, underwent different interpretations during the colonial period. The debate on polygyny was not homogenous and uniform and research reveals a plurality of viewpoints on the subject. The argument was often based on an assumption of sexual difference which, in some cases, emphasized the infertility and reproductive incapacity of the first wife, and in others, presented an idealization of domestic ideology where the second wife made the 'perfect' home. Simultaneously, there were also strong critiques of polygyny by women writers who underscored the misery of the first wife. These debates do not necessarily settle the question in favour of a particular position, but reflect a conversation held on marriage, children and family, and express how love, conjugality and affection were narrated in the public sphere.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 3; May 2011: p631-668
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 3; May 2011: p631-668
Key WordsPolygyny ;  Family ;  Sharafat ;  North Indian Muslim ;  Muslim - India ;  India ;  Muslim