237 64 28MB
English Pages 220 [216] Year 1993
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The History of Doin An
Account of Movements for Women's Rights and Feminism in India, 1800-1990
Illustrated
Radha Kumar ^cs-
^:
The
History of Doing
/
The An for
History of Doing
Illustrated
Women's
Account of Movements
Rights and Feminism in India 1800-1990
RAD HA KU MAR
VERSO London New York
First
published by Kali for
Women, New
Delhi
and by Verso 1993 © Radha Kumar 1993 Photo research by
Kali for
Women
All rights reser\'ed
Verso
UK: 6 Meard Street, London WIV 3HR USA: 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001-2291 Verso
is
the imprint of New Left Books
ISBN 0-86091-455-0 ISBN 0-86091-665-0 (pbk) British Library Catalogiiing in Publication
A catalogue record for this book is available
from the
Data British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
A catalogue
record for
this
book
is
available
from the Library of Congress
Typesetting by IPP Catalog Publications
New Delhi New Delhi
Pvt. Ltd.,
Printed in India by Indraprastha Press (CBT),
DEDICATION
This book
is
dedicated to the
memory of Rana Sen, who
exclaimed in tones of surprised gratification upon reading its very first draft 'good gracious, Radha, I believe you might produce a halfWay decent book!' My first meeting with Rana was one I never failed to
remind him of, maliciously: I was invited, as a 'girlfriend', to a political discussion on the new phase of the Indian Workers' movement, in 1978. Rana was standing on a bed (which served as a podium) declaiming; when there came a lull, I asked 'but what part do women workers ,
new struggle, or are they undifferentiated?' Rana bowed, and said: 'There is always a place in our
play in this
hearts for you.'
Our
I
subsided.
friendship began then: he had already captured
imagination. As we grew to know each other better, discovered a patriarch of an old and generous order; a
my I
man whose intellectual and emotional curiosity was such that what would begin as an often frivolous argument about feminism would be presented to me the next day as a feminist insight into human action. He helped me clarify my ideas; above all, by first rejecting and then
absorbing
And
gave me worth. Rana, with a song in my heart.
my views, he
so, to
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
My
thanks go to Kamaladevi Chattopadhyaya, who when I was working as her research
first
suggested to me, assistant, that
I
might later use some of the data I colproduce a book of my own, and who is
lected for her to
sadly no longer alive to see the fruition of her suggestion. Thanks are also owed to the Centre for Informal Education and Developing Societies in Bangalore, who funded
part of this research.
There are so many individuals who contributed to this book that I would like to apologise in advance to anyone I have inadvertently omitted, but special thanks are owed to Shiela Rowbotham, Edward and Dorothy Thompson, and Mary PCaldor for reading and commenting on drafts; to
Madhu
Sarin, for not only reading a part of the book,
but cooking and keeping house while I wrote the introwho taught me how to
duction; to Shoba Sadagopan,
look anew at
many of my inherited
ideologies; to Vibhuti
sending
me documents
Patel
and Gail Omvedt,
which
could not have otherwise laid hands upon; and the women in Stri Sangharsh, and Women and
to all
for
I
two groups which I not only love deeply, but owe all I have learnt both politically and personally about feminism in India, and of course to my parents and grandparents for things too numerous to be
Politics,
great gratitude to for
named.
And
but not least, to use a popular Indian phrase, publisher Urvashi Butalia, whose patience throughout this endeavour is legendary amongst those last
thanks to
my
who know me
well.
CONTENTS
Dedication
v
Acknowledgements vi
1.
Introduction
1
The Nineteenth Century 7 Towards Becoming 'The Mothers of the Nation' 32 2.
3.
5.
4. Organization and Struggle 53 Constructing the Image of a Woman Activist
74
The Contemporary Feminist Movement 96 7. The Campaign Against Dowry 115 The Agitation Against Rape 127 8. 9. The Nineteen Eighties 143 10. Personal Law and Communal Identities 160 II. The Agitation Against Sati 1987-88 172 12. The Struggle for a Safe Environment 182 6.
Conclusion
Index
191 197
1.
Introduction
This book attempts a brief interpretative history of women's movements in India, from the beginning of the nineteenth century until the present day. Close on two hundred years of activity in a country the size of a continent cannot be adequately described in a volume
or are engaged
in,
but also reafiirms hierarchical lead-
and hides from history the majority which makes up any movement. Hence the reader will ership structures
find a
number of figures
in the first par t of this book,
autobiographies, memoirs, collections of speeches and
which deals with the pre-Independence perio d, and hardly any individual accounts, biographies, etc., in the se cond ^ art, which deals with the contemporary period. The division between pre and post-Independen ce feminisms in India is partiv descriptive and parUv convenient The experience of colonial rule was one of the most important formative influences on the feminis t movement of the earlv twentieth century, whereas an e quivalent influence on contemporary feminism has been the experiment of democracy in post-Independence India. T his does not mean that there is no conti nuity and women 's post-Independence pre between movements: not only are our roots in the former, but distinctions between the two are made in the context o f
writings throughout the
rnntini^i ty.
this kind, hence what of major campaigns, organizations and figures. concentradng on the terms in which issues were defined and fo ught for, the kinds ot movements which develo ped, and the historical attitudes which they revealed One of the major problems ot embarking on such a work has been the paucity of literature available as a source, and the unevenness of the sources which were traceable. For example, some information is available on
of
is
presented here
is
a selecti ve
s urvey
.
notable tury,
women
reformers in the
or on nationalist leaders
twentieth century.
tury fairly readily
We
find a
first
late
nineteenth cen-
who were women, in the number of biographies,
half of the twentieth cen-
—but these are largely about the
.
The nineteenth renniry was a period in which th e wronpfs of women became major issu es: if
lives
and work of individual women. There is perhaps a bare handful of texts describing women's movements, and even here the bias is towards middle class and upper caste movements. Given that the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries saw a growing and active feminist movement, it is somewhat surprising that debates about the nature, tactics and strategy of campaigns, which are an inevitable part of any movement, have not been detailed. Unfortunately, this book does not do
within a couple of decades, by the thirties and fortie s, a
much
sp ecial category of 'women's activism' was constructed
to
fill
in
such lacunae, because of limitations of
ri gfus""and
under which were krgely conducted by men, by the Jate^riineteenth centuiy their wives, sisters, daughters, protegees and others affected by campaigns, such as that for women's education, had themselves joined in movements. By the early twentieth century women's own au tonomous organizations began to be formed, a nd early attempts at reforming the conditions
Indian
women
lived
.
time and space, and because other debates were not fully
'Equality between the sexes' was guaranteed by the
recorded. Possibly, such issues did not assume the
Constitution
importance which they do now, and in fact when reading
one gets the feeling that the simple coming together of large numbers of women from different backgrounds, especially in the movement, was so individual accounts
it overshadowed other questions. he contemporary feminist movem ent in India has concentrated mainly on documen ting women s movements i n particu lar 'hr.»p nf lanHl>-« la bourers and the working cla ss. Indeed, amongst large sections of the contemporary movement there is the
exhilarating that In contrast,
t
,
feeling that singling out individual women not only leads to a biased
and
partial view
of the movements they were
¥
—
of Independent India and there was a c omparative lull in feminist activities until th e nineteenseventies,
,
when
the Constitutional promise ot equa lity
was denounced as sham A spate of new women's organizati ons was bom and old one's revitalizedlBy thejiingteeneighties. The special category of 'women's activism was n ewly researched and expanded with a view to charting .
'
— \
r>rganir link^
ts specificities, as well as the 'logical' an J between feminism and M arxism, feminism and anti- I c ommunaliSffl, feminism and anti-^(^