ID | 185582 |
Title Proper | Gendering the everyday state |
Other Title Information | Muslim women, claim-making & brokerage in India |
Language | ENG |
Author | CHAMBERS, THOMAS ; Ansari, Ayesha |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This ethnographic article focuses on interactions between poor Muslim women, various intermediaries/brokers, and the Indian state. The article illustrates the complexities of claim-making and the forms of subjugation/marginalisation Muslim women experience when attempting to access resources, documents or paperwork. Contrary, however, to many representations of Muslim women’s engagements with the state, we also draw out agentive aspects as women hustle and negotiate to make claims and assert citizenship rights. Outcomes are variegated but also incorporate some women in brokerage roles, challenging assumptions regarding state/people mediation in India which foregrounds male brokers. The empirical detail is situated in a theoretical context incorporating gendered distinctions between shifting imaginaries of ‘nation’ and lived experiences of the ‘everyday state’. In a context where ‘nation’ has been evoked and articulated as a feminine form – through evocations of mata (mother) – we show how shifts towards a masculine imaginary, symbolised within Hindu-nationalist discourses, impacts Muslim women’s subjective experiences. We also illustrate that, whilst gendered imaginaries of ‘the nation’ are shifting, the ‘everyday state’ has long been experienced as a masculinised formation. Here we show how embodied involvements with the everyday state were constituted through gendered bureaucratic histories, spatial configurations, urban cosmologies and broader ideologies. |
`In' analytical Note | Contemporary South Asia Vol. 30, No.1; Mar 2022: p.72-86 |
Journal Source | Contemporary South Asia Vol: 30 No 1 |
Key Words | State ; Muslim Women ; India ; Gender ; Brokerage |