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MEMORIES OF A ROLLING STONE
by Vina Mazumdar
[available with Zubaan Books, 2010]
This endearing, witty, self-deprecating memoir
documents the life of one of the leading feminists
of the contemporary Indian women's movement. Vin a
Mazumdar, one of the key researchers and writers of
the landmark report of the Committee on the Status
of Women in India, Towards Equality, here documents
her early life, her gradual politicization in a
household of liberal, educated Bengalis, and her
involvement in women's issues and the women's
movement.
Brought up to be outspoken and frank, Vinadi, as she
is affectionately known, began by becoming involved
in university-level politics in Bihar. Marriage and
a young family did not prevent her from pursuing her
studies and her career, in the teeth of considerable
opposition from relatives but with constant support
from her mother. On her return to India, Vinadi
first moved into the field of education, and then
with her involvement in the research and writing of
Towards Equality, was catapulted into the
women's movement.
An activist and institution builder, Viandi set up
the Centre for Women's Development Studies in Delhi,
one of the leading research and outreach
institutions for women in the country. In this rare
memoir, Vinadi provides a rich history of the
contemporary women's movement in India.
Vina Mazumdar is an activist, institution builder,
and academic. She is a founder of the Centre for
Women's Development Studies, Delhi and of the Indian
Association of Women's Studies. She serves as Member
Secretary of the Standing Committee on Women's
Studies of the Government of India. Since 2006 she
has been a National Research Professor of Social
Sciences, Government of India.
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THE MIND AND THE MEDIUM: EXPLORATION IN THE
EVOLUTION OF IMPERIAL POLICY IN INDIA
by Vina Mazumdar
[Published by
Three Essays
Collective, 2010]
Vina Mazumdar revisits the questions crucial to
understanding the intellec tual
history of colonial India.; She analyses the many
dimensions of colonial policy, the
intentions and motivations of the men on the ground
and in charge, the debates around policy making, the
significance of the options involved and choices
made, the context of colonialism and
anti-colonialism as it impinged on policy making and
its reception by different sections of Indians, and
the social and political implications of specific
imperial policy.
In the process she explores the efforts of Indians
to evolve and create ideas and institutions geared
to Indian needs and aspirations, providing
meticulous documentation of conflict and assertion
in the areas of education, gender, culture and
political claims.
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DISABILITY AND SOCIETY: A READER
edited by Renu Addlakha, Stuart
Blume, Patrick Devlieger, Osamu Nagase and Myriam
Winance [available with Orient BlackSwan, 2009]
In the 1 980s and 1 990s disabled scholars in the
West began to develop a radical critique of
biomedical conceptions of disability that focused
exclusively on the individual
body and its limitations. They also exposed the
failure of the social sciences to critically address
what this medical understanding of disability meant,
and what it excluded from consideration. Out of
their work emerged what is generally called the
'social model' of disability. Over the past twenty
years this perspective has generated a substantial
literature, much of it making use of the methods of
qualitative social research. Narratives and life
histories produced by disabled people themselves
have a central place in the Disability Studies
literature. This work has major implications for
professionals in the rehabilitation field, for the
social sciences, and the ultimate goal, for the full
integration of disabled people into society. However
almost all of it focuses on the traditions,
practices and dilemmas of northern countries.
In India, in Thailand and in most of Asia, the field
of disability continues to be dominated by the
biomedical model.
Thus, 'disability' is understood as an incurable
chronic illness and, increasingly, an object for
medical diagnosis and investigation. Despite many
positive developments, little convergence between
disability politics and practice on the one hand,
and sociology and anthropology on the other has
taken place. Surveying the international literature
on disability and rehabilitation, it becomes
apparent that many studies carried out in Asian
countries are designed to measure the extent of
(unmet) need or the impact of services or attitudes
to disabled people. Virtually no studies make use of
the innovative, usually qualitative and often
holistic approaches developed in Western countries
over the past twenty years.
This book introduces readers in Asian countries to
the recent disability literature of the West. The
editors hope that it will inspire new thinking among
social scientists, rehabilitation professionals and
organisations of disabled people themselves that
could further the empowerment of people with
disabilities.
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WOMEN'S STUDIES IN INDIA - A
READER. edited by Mary E. John
[available with
Penguin Books, New Delhi, 2008]
Women's
studies first emerged in India during the 1970s as a forceful
critiqu e of those processes that had made women invisible after
independence - invisible not only to society and the state, but
also to higher education and its disciplines. Since that
beginning, so much has happened in this already vast field that
it would be hard to find a major issue or subject that has not
been addressed by scholars and activists.
This comprehensive reader
sets out to provide a map of the development of women's studies
and the ever expanding terrain that it has been investigating.
The introduction explores the growth of the field from the
upheavals of the 1970s to the transformed conjunctures of the
1990s. In the process, the often elusive relationships between
women's studies, the women's movement, and the structures of
higher education are highlighted. Over eighty edited essays have
been brought together in this single volume under distinct
thematic clusters - from the new beginnings of the 1970s to
politics, history, development, violence, the law, education,
health, family and household, caste and tribe, religion and
communalism, sexualities, and literature and the media. This
reader is for both newcomers to women's studies and for those
who have long been part of it.
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DECONSTRUCTING MENTAL ILLNESS:
An Ethnography of Psychiatry, Women and the Family, by Renu
Addlakha [Zubaan Books, Delhi, 2008]
Drawing from feminist, post
modern, cultural and soci ological and medical anthropological
literature, this work shows the complex inter twining of illness
and culture in the context of mental disorder.
The ethnographic context of
the study is the interface between mental health professionals,
patients and their families in a local psychiatric hospital in
New Delhi. The book anchors the discussion around feminist
thinking and praxis in the mental health realm, along with the
traditions of cultural psychiatry and medical anthropology.
Deconstructing Mental Illness
is relevant and contemporary, and makes an important health and
women. This important new work extends the frontiers of social
science research and offers alternative perspectives on women,
health and disability.
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Exposing the Myths of Muslim Fertility: Gender and Religion in
a Resettlement
Colony of Delhi (CWDS),
by Sabiha Hussain
As a consequence of the politicisatton of religion in India, the
study of religious differentials in
fertility and family
planning is a highly sensitive issue. Not just the
popular media but even scholarship has been instrumental in
fomenting ideas about the alarming growth of the Muslim
population due to Islamic beliefs and practices. Thus, the
communalisation of the population debate has made any discussion
of the reproductive practices of Muslims both highly contentious
and deeply confused.
This comparative
study of two religious communities, Hindu and Muslim, in one
of Delhi's slums throws considerable light on their
reproductive behavior by going beyond commonly held stereotypes.
It begins by exploring whether religious differences override
the commonalities of gender class and socio-economic status. The
exact nature and extent of differences between these two
communities is carefully analysed drawing on aspects of women’s
health, marriage practices, child mortality, migration,
education and work patterns. Existing theories in the vast
demographic literature, especially on there relationships
between religion and fertility, are also, explored. |
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In So Many Words: Women's Life
Experiences from Western and Eastern India. edited by Aparna Basu
and Malavika Karlekar [ available with Routledge ]
This volume marks a new trend in understanding
women's varied experiences of life: individual introductions situate the
narrator in a context - and then her voice takes over, with no
intervention from the editors. Carefully chosen photographs gleaned from
personal collections provide an important visual context to the many
worlds that the women inhabited.
The mélange includes memoirs, published articles,
'portraits from memory', a collection of essays, and an oral interview.
In all, the Self is the focus. The writings of Sailabala, Li Gotami and
Shakuntala go beyond a recounting of their lives and deal with spiritual
and travel experiences. Three of the essays are excerpts from published
autobiographies - Sarala Devi Chaudhurani's Jeevaner Jharapata
(Life's Fallen Leaves), Kalpana Dutt's Reminiscences and
Sailabala Das's A Look Before and After.
Vidyagauri Neelkanth's writings are essays, with a
selection of amazingly candid letters exchanged with her husband.
Anasuya Sarabhai's is an interview with niece Gira and Monica's a
selection from an unpublished memoir. Li Gotami,
whose original name was Rutty Petit,
travelled to Manasarovar, and a few of the
magazine articles on this amazing journey have been reproduced here.
The personal narrative - be it an autobiography, a
letter or a diary - has come to be recognised as an acceptable source of
information in history and the social sciences. The readings of personal
narratives included here help in painting various images of lives that
we can only know at second hand. |
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Women Workers and Globalization: Emergent
Contradictions in India
(Stree, Calcutta)
By Indrani Mazumdar
Investigating
the impact of globalization on women workers in India, this book
demystifies the
phenomenon of globalization, offering an overview of its
prime drivers, processes and forces. Four sectoral studiesof women
workers are provided: two on factory women in garment exports and
electronics; the third on homebased workers in a range of manufacturing
processes and industries; and the fourth on middle class women working
in Information Technology Enabled Services (ITES).
Primary surveys were conducted amongst women workers in 2002-2004,
covering Delhi and its satellite townships of Noida and Gurgaon. In
addition, by using secondary sources, the study links the experiences of
these Delhi-based women workers with their counterparts in the same
sectors in other parts of the country for a wider understanding of the
impact of globaliszation.
The analysis of garment exports,
electronics and IT services, which are clearly linked to global
production and service networks, brings out global sectoral trends and
their ramifications. The study of home-based workers, on the other hand,
has focused more on the policy framework towards this particular section
and the changes in perspectives that have accompanied the liberalization
process.
Indrani Mazumdar has had a long and continuous association with the
women and worker's movements in India. She is senior research associate,
Centre for Women's Development Studies, Delhi.
CWDS, New Delhi, 2007.
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Visualizing
Indian Women, 1875-1947
(edited by Malavika
Karlekar) (available from
OXFORD)
Photography
as a medium has captured the diverse realities of women's lives
over the last century and a half, providing a mor e holistic
understanding of what is learned through the written word,
memory, and recall. Visualizing Indian Women is a collection of
300 such rare photographs depicting women's lives during the
period 1875-1947, gleaned from archives as well as private
collections.
With a comprehensive, lucidly
written introduction that places the photographs in context,
this volume will be of great interest to general readers,
students and scholars of gender studies, history, sociology,
culture and media studies; photographers, photo-journalists,
archivists, and art historians.
Malavika Karlekar is Editor,
Indian Journal of Gender Studies, and Curator 'Re-presenting
Indian Women: A Visual Documentary, 1875-1947, Centre for
Women's Development Studies, New Delhi.
Oxford University Press, New
Delhi, 2006.
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Planning Families, Planning Gender
by Mary E. John, Ravinder Kaur,
Rajni Palriwala, Saraswat i Raju, Alpana Sagar
The Adverse Child Sex Ratio in Selected Districts of Madhya Pradesh,
Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Haryana and Punjab
[
Full Text ]
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Memory Frames: Oral Narratives
(By Kumud Sharma) [available from CWDS]
'Oral Narratives' of
four leading feminists, academics and activists, has coincided with the
Silver Jubilee celebrations of the CWDS . The narratives presented in the
book are reflections of four first generation women's studies
practitioners on perspectives framed by feminist debates in India during
the last three decades and the key issues which constitute the debates
within women's studies.
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Enduring Conundrum:
India's Sex Ratio
(Edited by Vina
Mazumdar, N.Krishnaji) (Rainbow Publishers)
Fon dly remembering him as ‘Census Mitra’, this
book pays tribute to the scholarship and extraordinary gender concerns of
Asok Mitra, who expertise in the census analysis often went beyond the
confines of demography to directly caution the state on the deteriorating
decline of the female sex ratio in India.
It traces the events that inspired and guided the social
scientists of his time and radically changed the pattern of
demographic research to give it a shift from mere data analysis
to one of social concern.
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Gender Biases and
Discrimination against Women:
What do different
indicators say?
(UNIFEM)
This report
addresses different dimensions of women’s equality and e mpowerment through
a set of quantitative indicators. The issue of survival, women’s health,
education, work, economic participation and contribution, their presence
and participation in private-public decision making, women’s safety and
security are among the diverse aspects covered in the report. The
relative performance of the states/union territories of India in different
spheres was assessed and analysed for possible explanations. States
requiring urgent and immediate attention of policy makers and planners
were highlighted in the study based on a simple ranking method.
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Space For Power:
Women’s Work and Family
Strategies in
South and South –East
Asia
(By Joy
Deshmukh-Ranadive
)
(Rainbow Publishers)
Th is monograph develops a multi-disciplinary, analytical framework, which
can be used in both, field research and subsequent analysis of data.
The household and family are conceptualized in the context of
intra-domestic power dynamics. The concept of ‘space’ is developed to capture both, power
and empowerment. Parallel categorization of ‘space’ and ‘environment’ in their physical,
economic, socio-cultural and political dimensions, link the micro with the
macro. The framework draws
upon the project “Women’s Work and Family Strategies in South and
South-East Asia” which comprised of inter-regional collaborative studies,
conducted by the Centre for Women’s Development Studies, New Delhi,
India, under the sponsorship of the United Nations University.
These studies had focused on women’s work, migration and education
as family strategies used for survival and upward mobility.
The monograph uses the finding of the studies to substantiate the
framework, and simultaneously analyses the studies using categories
developed in the framework.
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Between Tradition,
Counter Tradition And Heresy
Contributions in Honour
of Vina Mazumdar
(Edited by Lotika
Sarkar, Kumud Sharma, Leela Kasturi)
(Rainbow Publishers)
This volum e provides perspectives on a range of issues in some key areas
that have exercised scholars and activists in women’s studies for more
than two decades. The richly
diverse collection brings together contributions by some of the leading
scholars in women’s studies who critically reflect on complex questions
and challenges facing women’s studies and the women’s movement.
The papers address issues such as legacies and futures of women’s
studies, a theory of grassroots feminism, politics and practices within
the family, kinship networks, marriage and motherhood and the ideologies
that shape women’s worlds. The papers also discuss the challenges offered by political processes,
fundamentalism and cultural constructions hostile to women.
Some contributors have explored the relationship between
articulations of the women’s question and the discourses on identity,
citizenship and political participation.
A few narratives reveal how the worldviews and perspectives of the
authors have changed through research in women’s studies.
Multidisciplinary and insightful, the 22 articles in the volume
will be of interest to scholars and activists alike
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Daughters of the Earth:
Women and Land in Uttar Pradesh
(By
Smita Tewari Jassal)
This book problematizes women’s relationship
to land from historical, anthropological and socio-legal perspectives, the
underlying assumption being that legal title to own land as well as
exercise control over it as a productive resource, have hitherto been
denied to them. Hence, the
significance of identifying those socio-historical processes which are
likely to have resulted in the marginalization of women within the power
and resource systems that govern agriculture.
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Crimes Against Women:
Bondage and Beyond
(Hindi version is also available) (CWDS)
This
campaign document contains an analytical study based on t he 1996
National Crimes Record Bureau (NCRB) district level data.
It maps the high crime reporting districts of India with highlights
of states over five years, from 1995 to 1999, recording some milestones of
action taken by the Women’s Movement.
It reproduces the 1979 open letter to the Chief Justice of India
which helped to speak of widespread protests against the Mathura rape Case
– since then acknowledged as heralding the revival of the women’s movement
in India after independence and extracts on custodial rape from People’s
Union of Democratic Rights (PUDR). It also charts the role of the print media in reporting
crimes against women. It
provides a detailed state and district level data for five years on
different categories of crime with a select bibliography
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Shifting Sands: Women’s Lives and Globalization
(Stree, Calcutta)
Eager to be ‘global’, India’s economic policymakers have accepted
stabilization and structural adjustment as necessary tools of development.
What does this mean for women?
While gender has become increasingly important in development
polices, there is less awareness that policies and structural adjustment
are never gender-neutral.
The myth of neutrality continues unchallenged while women often suffer de
facto exclusion from the development process because of methods of
implementation in the field.
Government aid progammes requiring the consent of ‘father or husband’,
Green Revolution facilitators who passed on expertise to men only,
panchayat laws seeking to debar women with more than two children from
holding office – the instances are legion.
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