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ID178871
Title ProperNation and Its ‘Other’ Women: Muslim Subjectivity and Gendered Agency in Delhi
LanguageENG
AuthorBhardwaj Datta, Anjali
Summary / Abstract (Note)Partition produced newer anxieties for Delhi’s Muslims as they became subject to the everyday violence of both state and society, exacerbated by the rise of Hindu nationalism and the organised demarcation of Muslim-dominated areas as ‘exclusionary’ and ‘contested’ zones. While the city was fraught with violent conflicts and exclusionary politics, gender was also being redefined and renegotiated. This article will query the particular lived experience and embodied agency of Muslim women in order to study gender and space within the context of social, cultural, economic and political changes after Partition. It will explore the ways in which women exercised agency and claimed space and belonging in everyday negotiations and strategies for survival, thereby contributing to family income and small capitalism in the Old City. It will study their diverse experiences which were shaped by their social location and challenged by the political, religious, economic and social processes that impinged upon their lives. Rather than seeing them as passive subjects of history, it foregrounds Muslim women’s navigation of state, community and the household in independent India.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 44, No.2; Apr 2021: p.380-397
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2021-04 44, 2
Key WordsCommunity ;  Gender ;  Agency ;  Delhi ;  Lived Experience ;  Ghetto ;  Household Production