ABSTRACT

This book is a detailed analysis of the food scarcity and epidemics among the womenfolk and other vulnerable sections of society in colonial Orissa. Its major significance lies in the fact that the food crisis, mass exodus and adverse sex ratio continue to raise questions in the contemporary world. Studies of such experiences help in re-designing strategies to meet the challenges arising from natural disasters, wars, pandemics, besides poverty and uncertain production outcomes.
The study of Orissa Famine of 1866 explodes the myth upheld by the colonial administrators that women died at a lower rate than men in famines, because they could easily adapt to food scarcity and were supposedly less prone to infectious diseases. Evidence based on historical, sociological and biological factors showed that increasing male migration, much of it, leading to high mortality, explains the change in sex ratio during the colonial period.
This work also shows that many of today’s consumption preferences, linguistic usages and cultural habits of people, carry traces of cataclysmic experiences. This book also highlights the fact that most famines are the result of policy failures and, are often rooted in structural inequalities with serious consequences for women, lower castes and the poor alike.
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chapter Chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|43 pages

The Political Economy of Orissa, 1860-1921

chapter Chapter 3|67 pages

The Great Orissa Famine of 1866

The Event and the Process

chapter Chapter 5|25 pages

Later Famines

Social Impact and State Response

chapter Chapter 6|36 pages

Female Mortality in Famines, 1866-1974

chapter Chapter 7|27 pages

Gender and Class Incidence of Infectious Diseases

chapter Chapter 8|25 pages

Gender Discrimination in Food and Health Care

chapter Chapter 9|56 pages

Rise and Fall of Sex Ratio

chapter Chapter 10|48 pages

Migration in the Famine Era

Gender, Caste and Class

chapter Chapter 11|11 pages

Famines and Women, Past and Present

Some Concluding Reflections