ABSTRACT

The volume brings together readings describing a range of less-traversed aspects and transferences of women’s rights and struggles in India and develops a comprehensive understanding of the interface between women’s activism and politics.

The book documents and discusses diverse ways in which Indian women have struggled for empowerment, political voice and representation, and rallied against injustice and discrimination. Against the backdrop of women’s assertion of rights and negotiations for empowerment, the chapters in this volume explore diverse facets of collective agency, and emanations of women’s politico-legal struggles against stereotypes of gender and class in post-independence India. While the donor-driven international community has been eager to celebrate the successes of its global normative agenda-setting and ‘best practices’ approach, this book - based primarily on field research by the contributors - showcases authentic local ownership and women’s own agency, taking seriously the need to understand the cultural context and pay attention to intersectionality. It presents various examples of women’s activism for change, reflecting on the quotidian struggles and dynamic assertions of voice and political power, within and outside of formal political institutions. The book is a contribution to the debate about agency and ownership as key aspects of empowerment, highlighting women who defy dominant narratives.

It will be an essential read for students and academics of political science, gender studies, sociology and social sciences, and cultural studies. It will also be of interest to readers interested in the history of women’s movements and their participation in national and local politics in India.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Women's empowerment in India

chapter 2|19 pages

Multi-perspectivity in Indian legal discourse

The Hindu Code Bill debate

chapter 3|19 pages

Women's political participation in India

Alternative paths to empowerment

chapter 5|20 pages

The role of self-help groups in rural Odisha

Promoting women's empowerment

chapter 6|16 pages

Speaking up from behind the veil

Women's participation in the Jan Sunwai and the struggle for transparency in rural Rajasthan

chapter 7|13 pages

The Sa-chetana process

In search of frameworks to understand women's empowerment

chapter 8|15 pages

Corpo-activism

Dance and activist labour in the work of Komal Gandhar, Kolkata 1