ABSTRACT

This book uses communities of women as a framework for reading women’s experience, rights and aspirations in Assam and Northeast India. It explores the varying roles played by such communities in the formation of society, the emergence of a women’s public sphere and the representation of these communities in culture. The essays in the volume study a host of women’s communities including the Mahila Samiti, Jain women’s organisations, Lekhika Sanstha, lesbian communities, religious gatherings, scientific and environmental groups, women’s collaborations through cookbooks, as well as nebulous communities of victims of persecution. They examine how women’s communities are both empowering and transformational but may paradoxically also be regressive and static.

Lucid, analytical, and rich with case studies, this volume will be useful to scholars and researchers of gender studies, sociology, political science, history and cultural studies, particularly those interested in Northeast India.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part |132 pages

Society

chapter |24 pages

‘Great Sensation in Guwahati'

Mini's marriage, Assam Mahila Samiti and the Sarda Act in late colonial Assam

chapter |24 pages

Participation in and Access to the Public ‘Sacred' Space

Sisterhood and the Naamghar in Assam

chapter |27 pages

Questions of Space, Autonomy and Identity

A study of the communities of Jain women in Dibrugarh

chapter |29 pages

Lesbian Women and the Politics of Community Formation

Changing discourses on citizenship

part |118 pages

Culture

chapter |28 pages

Media Representing Women – Women in the Media

Exploring possibilities of community

chapter |24 pages

Woman Writing Woman

A study of Pushpalata Das's Agnisnata Chandraprava

chapter |22 pages

The Assam Lekhika Sanstha

A community of women writers