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引用次数: 0
摘要
殉夫和守寡的 "罪恶 "是 19 世纪和 20 世纪初印度社会改革和妇女进步的两大要素。这些 "罪恶 "植根于种姓主义和性别歧视的意识形态和习俗,而占主导地位的改革议程在很大程度上并未认识到这一点。关于妇女社会进步的叙述只关注上层阶级和上层种姓妇女,她们的生活被婆罗门教和父权制的贞洁、纯洁和对丈夫的奉献等理想所规定。因此,"父权制 "被解释为压迫上层上等种姓妇女的传统制度。伴侣婚姻、守寡、殉夫等社会改革只在上层种姓社区盛行。同样值得注意的是,社会改革的目的是复兴 "伟大的 "印度教传统,摒弃通过殉夫习俗表现出来的不良因素。本文通过比较阅读拉贾-拉莫汉-罗伊关于殉夫和守寡的论述以及 B. R. 安贝德卡关于内婚的思想,研究了婆罗门父权制的根源,以界定种姓性别化在强加虚假的民族主义同一性方面的作用。
Counting the Numbers: Nationalism and the Question of Surplus Women
The ‘evils’ of sati and widowhood constituted two of the major elements of social reformation and women’s progress in India in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. These ‘evils’ were rooted in casteist and sexist ideologies and practices, an aspect that remained largely unrecognised by the dominant reformist agendas. The narrative of social progress of women focused only on the upper class and upper-caste women whose lives were prescribed by brahmanical and patriarchal ideals of chastity, purity, and devotion to husband. Consequently, ‘patriarchy’ was interpreted as a traditional system oppressing the upper-class upper-caste women. The social reformations such as companionate marriage, widowhood, sati, were practices predominant only in upper-caste communities. It is also significant to note that social reformation was intended to revive the ‘great’ Hindu tradition and rid it of its bad elements exhibited through the practice of sati. This article, through a comparative reading of the discourses on sati and widowhood by Raja Rammohan Roy and the idea of endogamy by B. R. Ambedkar, examines the roots of brahmanical patriarchy to delineate the gendering of caste in imposing a false homogeneity of nationalism.
期刊介绍:
The Indian Journal of Gender Studies is geared towards providing a more holistic understanding of society. Women and men are not compared mechanically. Rather, gender categories are analysed with a view to changing social attitudes and academic biases which obstruct a holistic understanding of contributions to the family, community and a wider polity. The journal focuses, among other issues, on violence as a phenomenon, the social organisation of the family, the invisibility of women"s work, institutional and policy analyses, women and politics, and motherhood and child care.