ID | 157875 |
Title Proper | Managing marriages through ‘self-improvement |
Other Title Information | women and ‘new age’ spiritualities in Delhi |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ponniah, Ujithra |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | There has been a rise in the availability and consumption of ‘New Age’ spiritualities in urban India. I focus on one such self-care practice, Reiki, in a heterogeneous Delhi neighbourhood, and the engagement of urban upper-caste women from middle-class joint families with it. I argue that Reiki classes can be read as a site for the formation of gendered subjectivities. There are four kinds of interpersonal problems women discussed in Reiki classes: one's well-being in families, divorces, problems with mothers-in-law and material success. Through the habitualisation of positive thoughts, maintaining cosmic balance and managing one's ‘life-energy’, women were taught to take control of their lives within the constraints of familial situations. Through a focus on the self, these practices re-teach women to adapt happily by visualising the intimacies they desire, articulating their anxieties and imagining newer ways of ‘doing’ marriage. I argue that practices like Reiki disempower women through a language of self-responsibilisation. Self-healing strategies like Reiki therefore function both as a ‘technology of the self’ and as an extension of the adaptable Hindu joint family. |
`In' analytical Note | South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 41, No.1; Mar 2018: p.137-152 |
Journal Source | South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2018-03 41, 1 |
Key Words | Women ; Marriage ; Self ; Hindu Joint Family ; New Age Spiritualities ; Reiki |