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Chapter - I Introduction and Methodology

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CHAPTER - I

INTRODUCTION AND METHODOLOGY


Every society is bound by certain customs, followed blindly by everyone.
Indian society is no exception to it. It has been the cradle of traditional beliefs and
practices. Social structure and tradition in India remained impervious to major
elements of modernity until the contact with the west began through the colonial
regimes, which dominated India for about two centuries.

Tradition constitutes a bundle of beliefs, customs and attributes which are


handed down to us by our ancestors. According to Singh (1973), Hindu society
consists of certain traditions which are in fact, value themes. Before the
emergence of modernization, the Hindu society was based on the following value
components : a) Hierarchy b) Holism c) Karma and d) Transcendence. These
value components are found ingrained in Hindu scriptures such as the Gita, the
Mahabharata, the Ramayana, the Vedas, Puranas and Upanishads. The structure
of tradition grows in two stages, first through orthogentic or indigenous evolution
and second through heterogentic encounters or contacts with other cultures or
civilizations. The social structure of these civilizations operates at two levels, first
that of folks or unlettered peasants and second, that of the elite or the reflective
few. The cultured processes in the former comprise the little tradition and those in
the latter constitute the great tradition. There is however a constant interaction
between the two levels of traditions. The nature of tradition is characterised by
the presentness of the past, the past as an object of attachment, the present as a
reinforcement of responsiveness to the past and the strength of traditional beliefs.
The primary socialization process in the families insists on strict adherence to
traditional values. But exposure to western culture, education and various other
media has brought tremendous changes through the process of modernization.

Indian society has its own particularities and therefore its own identity.
Singh, K.S. (1992) in The People of India reports that there are 4,635
communities inhabiting our country. These communities are actually ethnic
communities which include numerous castes, minority groups, scheduled tribes
and scheduled castes. There are thus, multi-ethnic groups in this country. When
modernity was introduced in this country, the traditional structures challenged the
inroads made by modernity. Our traditions are numerous. In a way, each caste or
ethnic group has its own bogey of traditions. These traditions decide the fate of
modernity.

Before seventies, tradition in India has largely been defined with reference
to structural-functional analysis. It stressed the strengthening part of tradition.
With the publication of Dumont s Homo Hierarchicus (1970), there appeared
structuralist approach to the study of traditions. The pivotal notions of
structuralism, such as ideology, dialectics, transformational relationships and
comparison through which a unity of principles among a variety of societal or
civilizational forms is established, have been brought to bear upon the analysis of
caste stratification in India. In his study of caste stratification in Homo
Hierarchius, Dumont has established that India is a religious society and the
concept of pure and impure is solely guided by traditions. The hierarchical caste
stratification, infact, is a tradition-bound social order. It is based on the principle
of inequality.

Dumont (1970) has considered ethnomethodology as a heuristic device to


understand Indian society. Ethnomethodology, as its originator Harold Garfinkel
defines it, is an effort directed to the tasks of learning ho members actual
ordinary activities consist of methods to make practical actions, practical
circumstances, common sense knowledge of social structure and practical
sociological reasoning analyzable. Whatever meaning one might give to
ethnomethodology, it means the role of traditions in the life-world of an
individual. In this sense, the common sense knowledge is nothing but the
knowledge about traditions. And the traditions constitute fundamentalism. Status
quo is the core of ethnomethodology. The post-Dumont sociology in India,
therefore gave prime importance to traditions in the study of Indian society.

Doshi (2003) in his book Modernity, Post Modernity and Neo-Sociological


Theories has discussed that during the 1970s and 1980s, the study of Indian social
structure was made with the strong emphasis on traditions. These studies took
three main theoretical and methodological directions: 1) Structuralism 2)
Ethnosociology or cultural analysis approach, and 3) Structural-historical. During
this time, Indian society was located at the grass roots level in terms of family,
caste and village traditions. Within structuralism, symbols and representations as
parts of Indian traditions were identified and analyzed. Sanskritization,
parochialization and dominant caste were the concepts which explained the local
traditions. The perspective of ethnosociology or cultural analysis included the
material drawn from textual traditions such as the Vedas, the Puranas, the
Upanishads and other epics. It also included the oral traditions laid down in the
folk songs, dances and tales.

The third Perspective on tradition refers to structural-historical approach.


It centered around the analysis of social structure in the process of change and
transformation in a historical setting often under the ideological framework of
modernization. It treats tradition only, on a cultural-historical legacy of values,
beliefs and customs, which are adaptive and regressive. This notion of tradition is
drawn from the empirical contexts rather than the texts which serve as source
material both for structuralism and ethnosociology. The major shift in the
meaning and definition of tradition is that it is analyzed at the grass roots level,
particularly at the level of village and caste. Second, besides its source in oriental
texts, it is also examined from empirical reality. Social changes in the structure of
tradition is generally analysed in the broader framework of transformation and
continuity. Yogendra Singh says, in the process of social change, no concern is
shown for the processes which have linkages with nation-building. It has also
been overlooked that the social change processes have heavily strengthened the
traditions. It appears that in most of the cases the traditions have been empowered
and the forces of modernization are weakened at the hands of fundamentalism.
Increasing modernization, couched with liberalization and globalization has
brought traditionalism face to face with modernity (Doshi, 2003, pp. 118-120).

The term modernization refers to the transformation of the traditional into


a more modern one. It implies a gradual but fundamental change in the life style
of the people and in their outlook of the world. Hence modernization is the new
facet of tradition. One cannot understand modernization in isolation because an
individual is made up of a past and a present. Modernization is both a theory and a
process. As a theory it has given place to the condemnation of a large number of
traditions; as a process it has landed itself to post modernity, which is in fact
hypermodernity or late modernity. There are four facts of modernization:
technological, institutional, valuational and behavioural. (Marion J. Levy, 1969)
The society will be considered more or less modernized to the extent that its
members use inanimate sources of power and tools to multiply the effects of their
efforts, which is obvious from the technological facet of modernization.
Institutional facet of modernization is as important as is technological. It refers to
the emergence or preponderance of modern institutions like bureaucracy,
professions, market economy, factory system, formal system of higher education
etc. A distinctive feature of modern institutions is their formal organizational
character which is what distinguished them from their traditional counterparts.
Rational reorientation of the given value system is the third integral facet of
modernization. In the sense, modernization implies a transition from traditional to
modernity. Used in its ideal, typical sense, tradition signifies a constellation of
such values as sacredness, ascription, particularism, fusion of roles and
subordination of the individual to the group. On the other hand, modernity
comprises of such values as secularity, achievement, universalism, role specificity
and individuality. Transition from the former to the latter value system, thus
constitutes the process of modernization. Of all the values that comprise
modernity, rationality is regarded as of generic significance.Accordingly, Myrdal
contents: In one sense all of the modernization ideals are contained in and derived
from the ideal of rationality and planning (Myrdal, 1970). Modernisation thus
implies a process of rational examination of the value system of a society with a
view to purging it of its irrational elements and incorporating into it more and
more rational elements. In other words, it signifies a process of socio-cultural
transformation along rational lines.

Finally, there is the psychic-cum behavioural facet of modernization


which refers to a great deal of psychic, physical and social mobility that
characterizes the process of modernization. Because of its cardinal principle of
man s abilit to acquire master o er nature and shape his o n destin , the
ideolog of moderni ation stirs peoples aspirations and makes them
achievement oriented. This in turn leads to physical as well as social mobility in
pursuit of better careers. It also tends to generate protest mobilizations against
structures of oppression, exploitation and injustice. Thus modernization declares
the passing of tradition.

Smelser (1959) describes the process of modernization as


multidimensional in nature. At the economic level, modernization is built upon
scientific knowledge, involves the change from subsistence farming to
commercial farming, replaces animal and human power with machines, entails the
spread of urbanization and involves the concentration of the industrial work force
in towns and cities, whereas at the non-economic levels modernization involves
the passing from tribal systems to democratic systems, the development of
education systems to provide training, a diminished role for religion, a shift from
the extended family to the nuclear family and greater social mobility, with class
position based upon achievement. In his Social Paralysis and Social Change:
British Working Class Education in the Nineteenth Century, Smelser (1991)
argues that every society can be regarded as in transition along a number of basic
cultural and institutional lines. For Smelser, any account of social change will
involve looking at a developmental sequence in which different combinations of
factors are identified and no one explanatory factor or set of factors can be singled
out as the most important factor in determining the process.

Many theorists believed that a new era, a modern era, was at hand that
would produce the emancipation of humanity from poverty, ignorance, prejudice
and the absence of enjoyment (Lyotard, 1984). Modernity would bring the
victorious struggle of reason against emotions or animal instincts, science against
religion and magic, truth against prejudice, correct knowledge against superstition,
reflection against uncritical existence (Bauman, 1992). As a new evolutionist,
Parsons (1964) saw modernization as a world wide goal, with subgoals of
industrialization, economic development and political independence. All these
will lead to a unified world system with shared modern values.

Modernization theory of the 1950s 1970s was basically a sub branch of


twentieth century evolutionary theory. It included the major value judgement -
the concept of progress. Sahlins and Service (1960) defined progress as
improvement in all-around adaptability. Speaking of cultures, they asserted that
the higher forms are again relatively free from environmental control, i.e., they
adopt to greater environmental variety than lower forms. And other evolutionists
added, higher forms adapt their environment to meet their needs. Nisbet (1969, p.
52) remarked that the theory of social evolution had been a justification for the
ascendancy of the west, and that, aside from empirical research the theory had
changed little since the 1800s. Much recent thinking on modernization has given a
more positive role to tradition and suggested a complex relationship between
tradition and modernity.

In India, as elsewhere in the world, modernization is understood as growth


of a uniform set of cultural and role structure attributes. Myrdal (1968, p. 57)
says that each has two sets of values which are differentiated as (i) Categorical or
independent values, and (ii) instrumental values. The categorical values enjoy
autonomy over instrumental values. Thus in the area of modernization, there are
standardized values and role structures.

There was a consensus among social thinkers that modernity ultimately led
to progress and development (Doshi, 2003). Admittedly, modernity started with
an economic thrust, and finally took to a political shift, which divided the world
into modern and modernizing and developed and developing. India witnessed
modernity during the British rule. Though modernity has been introduced soon
after the downfall of Mughal Empire, India got democracy despite having
industrialization and urbanization after the attainment of independence and the
promulgation of constitution. It is certain that the European countries experienced
modernity in the aftermath of enlightment, and India experienced modernity after
foreign invasion.

Doshi (2003) pointed out that India s modernit is specific to Indian social
structure. If there are multiple modernities, India s modernit is one ariant, one
specificity. If modernity is multi-dimensional, Indian modernity is determined by
Indian traditions. This refers to modernization traditions. It is because of the
specificity of Indian social structure, sociologists like Singh (1973) and Gupta
(2000) are in a way obsessed by the role of tradition in social structure. Neither of
them could talk about modernity without reference to traditions.

According to Yogendra Singh Indian society has entered into a new phase
of development. There has occurred a phenomenal change in the institutions of
kinship, marriage, caste, power and economy. The total social stratification has
taken a new shape. Indian traditions have increasingly become modern. Even, the
tribal India, which was based on kinship and barter economy, has entered into the
mainstream structure. Similarly, the weaker sections scheduled castes and
women have now become extremely sensitive and up in arms on any trivial
provocation.

Is India a modern society or is it a society caught between tradition and


modernity? (Batabyal, 2002). In the context of the question raised by Batabyal it
is important to remember that the assertion of modernity is not the end of the
traditional culture. Infact tradition has often used modernity to project itself in a
new fashion. Modernity implies the constant pursuit of improvement in human
lives and of the pursuit of progress. Unlike traditional settings, where virtue lies
in things remaining the same, in modern worlds change, development and
improvement are the goals. Max Weber defined modernity as rationalization.
George Simmel, a contemporary of Weber had a similar opinion. Both theorists
pointed out that the benefits of rationalization and industrialization embodied in
science and technology were offset by the environmental and military excesses
that scientific and technological progress allows. Further more, modern life
produces a great deal of alienation and anomie among individuals.

Simmel s anal sis of modern societ as focused primaril on the


individual experience of modernity, especially the experiences of the modern city
dweller. In his analysis, the excitement of metropolitan existence was tied
inextricably to the anomic and alienation that the perceived in modern life.
Simmel s ambi alence about modernit did not lead him to conservative nostalgia
for some past social existence or to radical suggestions for change.
Rationalization and objectivity offered greater freedom to individuals while at the
same time constraining and regimenting life. Money was a prime symbol of these
contradictions. Money provides individuals with greatly expanded opportunities
for social interaction at the same time that it depersonalizes the relationships that
emerged from those interactions. The abstract measure of value that money
represents stands in contrast to the human value of the individual. Individuals are
alienated from one another not because they isolated from others, but because
others are anonymous. This anonymity engenders an indifference to their
individuality a relationship to them without regard to who it is in any particular
instance.

By modernity, Giddens (2001) refers to the institutions and models of


behaviour established first of all in post feudal Europe, but which in the twentieth
century increasingly have become world-historical in their impact. Modernity can
be understood as roughly equivalent to the industrialized world, so long as it be
recognized that industrialism is not its only institutional dimension. The sub parts
of Giddens theor of modernit include distanciation, power, trust, and risk.
Distanciation refers to the fact that relationships are no longer tied to specific
locals. An important aspect of Giddens theor is po er the capacity to make
decisions and do things. Power both constrains and enables. Power as constraints
is not force, it is restriction of choice. In other words, even without the power that
goes which domination, individuals in the modern world still have a certain
amount of power (or control) over the choices they make.

Power, then is not only domination, but also transformative capacity or the
ability to make things happen. Thus to Giddens, the modern world is empowering
because it has freed people from the structures of traditional pre industrial society.
Like Luhmann, Giddens also refers to trust and risk. As with Luhmann, trust is
required in the modern world because we know so little about the systems with
which we have to deal. Giddens defines trust as confidence in persons or in
abstract systems, made on the basis of a leap of faith which brackets ignorance or
lack of information. The issue that Giddens raises, that is most closely related to
Luhamann s theor , concerns risk. Giddens emphasises the agenc or choice
aspect of risk. His view of risk goes beyond Luhmann s. Human beings
continually try to calculate future risk. In a rapidly changing modern society,
individuals attempt to lessen risk through planning. A good example is health or
life insurance. Giddens calls this colonization of the future.

Giddens has de oted considerable attention to Meads theor of the self.


Meads theor does not situate the refle i e and reflecti e indi idual ithin the
differentiated larger society. Giddens addresses the influence of the self on others,
society, and even global strategies. In fact, Giddens ie of the modern self is
quite different from those of Cooley, Mead, and Freud. In his books on Self-
identity (1992) and Intimacy (1993), he has discussed the connections between the
modern life and the individual. The individual exists within a structure but is also
agent, meaning that the self must be created. One further issue in self creation is
self actualization, or the effort to make oneself into what one wishes to be. To
Giddens, self-actualizations is possible because of reflexivity, or self reflection,
but is also a goal that is often impossible to attain. Thus to Giddens, the modern
world change includes distanciation, power, trust, risk and the created self.

According to Ganguly (1977, p. 52), modernisation consists in modifying


the existing tradition and creating room for new and better way of doing things
which suits the present world. He feels, it helps in enriching the existing culture
but not the cancellation of the old pattern. There is a continuous overlapping of
tradition and modernity in all walks of life. The dynamics of tradition and
modernity in India can be better understood in terms of symbolic interactionist
perspective (Mead, 1934). The symbolic interactionist perspective differentiates
between two forms of interaction: Passive and Active. The passive form of
interaction that takes place between the role performer and circumstances is called
adjusting. In this type of interaction the role performer does not so much seek to
control the circumstances as to conform to them. On the other hand, the active
form of interaction is called situating which signifies an activity on the part of role
performer by which he seek to control the situation rather than conform to it.
Situating may again be of two types: Conservative and Innovative. Conservative
situating implies a commitment to a particular status or strategy and for the same
reason it is destructive of the self as mere role performer. An innovative situating
involves the possibility of transferring from one circumstantial set to other, of
escaping the past influence for the present or of alternating from one social world
to another. Applying this frame of reference to the interaction between tradition
and modernity in India, it is not really adjusting that defines the nature of response
of the Indian tradition towards modernization, but the response of the Indian
tradition signified by situating, not conservative but innovative situating.

Apart from symbolic interactionist perspective, there are two sets of


theories which explain the emergence of modernity. They are (i) Classical
theories of modernity and (ii) Contemporary theories of modernity. Among the
classical theories, Ferdinant Tonnies , theor of tradition modernity continuum
and Emile Durkheim s theor of mechanical solidarit are taken into
consideration as it can be applied to the stud undertaken. Similarl Beck s
(1992) and Rit er s (1996) contemporar theories of modernit are also best
suitable to study the shift from tradition to modernity.

The German sociologist, Ferdinant Tonnies explained the emergence of


modernity from historical evolutionary perspective. His concepts of
Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft are based on the continuum of tradition and
modernity. European modernization is explained by Tonnies through these two
concepts. Tonnies theor is that European societ has passed from tradition to
modernity that is Gemeinschaft to Gesellschaft through a rationalizing process
involving a move from relationships based upon family and kin to those based on
rationalit and calculation. Tonnies theor of tradition modernity continuum
implies that no traditional or modern society is exclusively traditional or modern.
There are elements of modernity in traditional society and vice versa. What is
important is that traditional society in the process of rationalization becomes
modern society.

Emile Durkheim explained modernity in terms of evolution of society


from mechanical solidarity to organic solidarity. In mechanical society, the
general cohesion of the people swallows up the individual within the group. The
society which existed in Europe before the onset of industrialization was a
mechanical or traditional society. Traditions and the form of collective
conscience, repressive law and restitutive sanctions held the society together.
Emergence of modern industrial society in Europe gave rise to excessive
individualism. He has demonstrated how the division of labour and the
development of autonomous individuality affect social solidarity. In his words
the greater the indi idual autonom and speciali ation, the greater the indi iduals
dependence on society. Specialization creates social stratification and
stratification in this respect means functional interdependence. The dependence
of individual, despite his being autonomous makes society cohesive and
integrated. It is in the context that he defines modernity as social differentiation
and social stratification. Durkheim s finding is that modernit creates social
solidarity and harmony (Doshi, 2003).

Beck, the contemporary theorist of modernity who has written extensively


about risk and globalization argues in his book Risk Society: Towards a New
Modernity (1992) that the risk which is inherent in modern society would
contribute towards the formation of a global risk society. In a modern society,
there is technological change. And technology produces new forms of risks and
we are constantly required to respond and adjust to these changes. This risk
society, he argues, is not limited to environmental and health risk alone, it
includes a whole series of interrelated changes within contemporary social life
such as shifting employment patterns, heightened job insecurity, declining
influence of tradition and custom, erosion of traditional family patterns and
democratization of personal relations. What is particular about the modern risk
society is that the hazards of risk do not remain restricted to one country only. In
the age of globalization, these risks affect all countries and all social classes.
They have global, not merely personal consequences. Similarly, many forms of
manufactured risk, such as those concerning human health and the environment,
cross national boundaries.

In the personal era of industrialization, the nature of risk has undergone


tremendous change. Earlier, there was no absence of risk. But these risks were
natural dangers or hazards. There was earthquake, there was epidemic, there was
famine and there was flood. But, the risks in the modern society are created by
our own social development and by the development of science and technology.

The modernity, which is found in the present world, is called new


modernity by Beck. It essentially gives birth to a risk society. Beck has made his
perspective on modernity very clear that new modernity has abandoned the old
modernity and enables the individual to take his own decisions without any
reference to his class or caste consideration. If his self-evaluation of society is
faulty, he is likely to succumb to risk. Now, most of the risk emerge from the
modernity in which he lives. The new modernity is different from the industrial
modernity. In this new modernity, social relations and institutions have to be
individually chosen. In fact, in this new modern society, social ties and
connection have to be established, maintained and renewed by individuals
themselves. The shift from industrial society to risk society is a major break in the
process of transformation.

Ritzer begins his theory where Weber ends it. Weber argued that
modernity is rationalization. He talked of formal rationality which has importance
in structures such as bureaucracy. But there are other two types of rationality
namely (i) substantive rationality and (ii) theoretical rationality (Max Weber).
Substantive rationality entails the dominance of norms and values in the rational
choice of means and ends, whereas theoretical rationality is concerned with
rational cognitive processes. What Ritzer finds is that in a modern society people
pay all attention to formal rationality and the other two types substantive and
theoretical are callously marginalized. And hence, the need for hyper
rationality. Hyper rational system is one that combines and inter relates all the
three of Weber s forms of rationalit formal, substantive and theoretical or
intellectual. Ritzer developes a vivid metaphor to express his view of the
transformations taking place in industrialized societies. He says that there is a
trend available in the society which shows that it is moving towards highly
standardized and regulated model for getting things done. Many aspects of our
daily life, for example, now involve interactions with automated systems. It shows
that there has been hyper rationality in our modern society. To illustrate
his argument of hyper rationality, Ritzer refers to Mc Donaldization. Mc
Donaldi ation is the process b hich the principles of the fast-food restaurants
are coming to dominate more and more sections of American Society as well as
the rest of the orld (Doshi, 2003).

Giddens developed a theoretical perspective on the changes happening in


the present day world. In a world of rapid transformation, traditional forms of
trust tend to become dissolved. But living in a more globalized society, however
our lives are influenced by people we never see or meet, who may be living on the
far side of the world from us. Living in the information age, in his view, means an
increase in social reflexivity. Social reflexivity refers to the fact that we have
constantly to think about, or reflect upon, the circumstances in which we live our
lives (Giddens, 2001). When societies were more geared to custom and tradition,
people could follow established ways of doing things in a more unreflective
fashion. For us, by earlier generations many aspects of life that were simply taken
for granted become matters of open decision-making. For example, for hundreds
of years people had no effective ways of limiting the size of their families. But
with modern forms of contraception and other forms of technological involvement
in reproduction, parents could limit their family size. Similarly the forms of family
in which men and women participate in an equal fashion is also emerging in
everyday life. Virtually all forms of traditional families were based on the
dominance of men over women, something that was usually sanctioned in social
law. The increasing equality between the sexes cannot be limited only to the right
to vote, it must also involve the personal and intimate sphere. The democratizing
of personal life advances to the degree to which relationships are founded on
mutual respect, communication and tolerance (Loyal, 2003).

Modern versus traditional is closely associated with cultural change.


Culture is a meaningful zone each community ought to evolve in order to make
sense of the orld. It is man s culture that teaches him the specific a to lead
his life. Any culture has to be seen as a living tradition. This means that there are
possibilities of innovation, multiple interpretations and contestations. It is
therefore, important as Yogendra Singh has argued to conceptualize both tradition
and modernization as sets of values and role structures which interact as they
come into contact and between them a selective process of assimilation and
syncretism starts. Modernity gives a new momentum to tradition. In our
everyday existence, this complex interplay of tradition and modernity has perhaps
led to a kind of cultural schizophrenia (Beals and Spindler, 1967).

According to Moore (1987) there is interplay between traditionalizing and


modernizing trends in every society. Some of the ways in which traditionality
change to modernity are through innovation, gradual modification of traditional
norms and gradual modification of the attitudes of the custodians of traditional
beliefs. Amongst all, women are the custodians of traditional beliefs. But the
career and non career women have different levels of thought with regard to
tradition and modernity. In the transition, women have to face opposition from
men and traditional women. They are caught in an ambivalent situation in a
dilemma to adopt the established codes of the past and the practical realities of the
present to find a way to the beckoning expectation of the future. This process
usuall leads to conflict. Merton s concept of ambi alence refers to the co-
existence of opposing emotions, attitudes, or traits in the same individual or the
state of being pushed towards or pulled between two opposite goals. It is a state
of uncertainty, situations where a dilemma prevents people from taking right
decisions (Merton, 1976, p. 6).

Shah and Rao (1965), in Tradition and Modernity in India, have pointed
out that an individual becomes a marginal person, who stands on the border or the
margin of two cultural worlds, but is fully a member of neither. He is said to be
marginal to both groups. He may find it impossible to be regarded or to regard
himself as a full fledged member of either.

It is widely believed that radical changes are needed for the improvement
of the status of Indian woman, because our cultural traditions and its institutional
practices, are not particularly favourable to women. Women are oppressed or
women are idealized in a way that our culture fails to understand women, their
aspirations and dilemmas. Perhaps it is often thought structural transformations,
egalitarian values and cultural innovations would produce a new situation
conduci e to omen s emancipation. Women s emancipation requires a modern
secular culture a culture that rescues them from the bondage and oppression
implicit in traditional religious institutions and social practices. Modernity or the
process of secularization (or rationalization) demystifies the naturalness of the
male female division and hierarchy and shows how gender is essentially a
constructed category. It gives women the confidence to come out of all imposed
ideals and see the world with their own eyes.

Traditional Role of Women in India

Although one is tempted to see Indian women as oppressed, what is worth


recalling is that in the vedic society the status of women was not really very bad.
Not simply because there were women like Gargi, Atreyi, Lopamudra and Apala
who were the great Philosophers of the times and were among the composers of
the Rig Vedic hymns, but even the average woman found herself in a relatively
equalization milieu (Majumdar, 1953). This is not to suggest that there was no
element of patriarchy in the vedic society. There was certainly an attitude of
indifference towards the female child and marked partiality for the male child.
Yet, girls like boys underwent the upanayana ceremony at an early age. There
was no glorification of child marriage. Widows were permitted to remarry and the
highest education including vedic studies was open equally to men and women. It
would therefore, not be wrong to say that within the framework of the patriarchal
system, the position of women in the vedic society was remarkably good. The
later Hindu society failed to retain the vedic ideals thus women lost their earlier
status. Gradually, pre-puberty marriage became the normal rule. Women lost the
status of a duija or twice born, and came to be regarded as sudras. Naturally, like
sudras, they were declared unfit for reciting or even listening to vedic hyms. In
fact, as it has been repeatedly argued, the manu smriti created a theoretical basis
for the legal and social subordination of women. Never did Manu approve of the
vision of a free and self-determining woman. Instead as he argued women were
destined to remain dependent on the males of their families. Except streedhan
(Cash or kind gi en to the bridegroom b the bride s famil at the time of
marriage), women were not supposed to aspire for any property. Manu attached a
negative connotation to woman hood.

India passed through many stages and it was difficult for women to
prevent themselves from getting affected by societal transformations (Desai,
1957). In the Puranic period, the story of the subjugation of women repeated itself
ith more intensit . In the name of the pati rata dharma omen ere denied
even the slightest independence. Pre-puberty marriages were widespread and
widows were not allowed to remarry whereas the horrible practice of sati was
eulogized as an ideal. The arrival of Islam was a significant event. Polygyny and
the pardah (covering the entire body from head to toe) were two of the most
important social institutions of the Muslim conquerors of India. And these
institutions did affect even the destiny of Hindu women. For example, before the
Muslim conquest Brahmins had not followed the custom of sati (the practice of
ending a oman s life at the funeral p re of her husband), but follo ing the
conquests, instances of Brahmin women practicing sati were also recorded. Yet
the cultural innovation that followed because of the fusion of these two religious
s stems ga e a ne meaning to the omen s question.
With the Bhakti movements, the equality of men and women in the
religious sphere was reasserted. Great women devotees like Mira, Jani, Mukatabai
and Gangubai were born (Bhattacharya, 1953). To summarize, the cultural ideal of
Indian womanhood is full of ambiguities. To begin with, continual efforts were
made to silence her and den her autonom . The ideals imposed on her ere
often designed to repress her free and natural growth. On the other hand, in the
cultural ideal one sees great respect to the potential of motherhood. Nothing
would be complete without good mothers or benevolent mother goddesses. Again
women were seen as destructive seducers or destroyers. Although these
ambiguities were real, the fact was that the average woman in the post-vedic
society, apart from some remarkable exceptions during the Buddhist era and the
Bhakthi movement, lived in a state of utter subjugation. As a result, the encounter
of cultures (colonialism) the perceptions of a new and modern India and the
resultant freedom struggle witnessed stimulating debates on the destiny and status
of women (Pathak, 1998, p.117).

Modern Role of Women in India

Colonialism created a situation in which cultures were continually


reinterpreted. The modern Indian intellectuals from Raja Ram Mohan Roy to
Gandhi responded to the new age, looked at the west, its liberal, rational
and scientific world view and reinterpreted their cultures and traditions. As a
result, we saw the interplay of tradition and modernity, science and religion
and the urge to create a new India combining the past and present. These cultural
e periments and inno ations ga e a ne meaning to the omen s life.
The identity of a tradition was often equated with its notion of womanhood.
Retaining the ideal of one s culture as like retaining the ideal of
womanhood. Yet the new age or its creative and intellectual spirit realized that
much of our tradition ought to be altered. These twins urges that of resisting
the colonization of our culture, yet embracing changes, led to the imagination
of a new-women. A woman willing to welcome the new age, while not forgetting
her tradition, exhibits her ideal. Infact, in this new woman, modern India sought
to see her identity her experiments with tradition and modernity, secularism and
religion (Pathak, 1998, pp. 117-118).
In the modern era, many women in India have entered careers which were
once male dominated. They have become more rational and individualistic in
outlook which is contradictory to tradition. Industrialisation has brought a
continuing shift from family centered to factory centred production. A large
number of women left family located tasks for the factory, office, classroom and
service establishments. The shift to employment for married women, particularly
mothers is obvious from their socialising service and affectional functions in the
home. Cultural change has increased the free time of mothers and simultaneously
provided extensive employment opportunities. For many women, it has presented
an attractive opportunity to play a significant new role. As the proportion of
employed married women increased, the relative power of these women increased
adding further to a development of egalitarian ideology. As a result of the wide
challenge to the ideology of male supremacy and responsibility, the emergence of
the married women as a second wage earner posed less of a personal threat to the
husband. In the emerging egalitarian ideology, there is no compulsion that all the
income should be earned by the husband. Most Indian families however still
support male dominance, at the same time allowing greater say to wives in
domestic decision making.

Working women in India living with their husbands may be put into two
categories. These categories are (a) those to whom an employment gives an
opportunity to use their individual talents and educational qualifications, (b) those
who are least likely to experience major conflicts in their responsibilities towards
their children and to receive negative reactions from their husbands and relatives.
But women have become aware that if they wish to contribute to the well being of
the family, the best way to do so is by becoming a wage earner.

In the shift from traditional to modern society, a number of significant


qualitative changes occurred. Traditionally, females have identified with the
expressive private realm and males with the instrumental public one. As women
increasingly have entered the public arena, they have been expected to take on
instrumental qualities that clash with their traditional expressive ones. This clash
between expressive and instrumental and between private and public orientations
is one of marginality of being caught between the margins of public and private
worlds. Feminists are likely to be women who have one foot firmly planted in
each world home and work (Rani, 1976). The intuitiveness, gentleness and
supportiveness acquired through their expressive heritage clash with the
assertiveness, competitiveness and individualism expected in their instrumental
work roles. From the vantage point of caught betweenness, feminists have begun
to question the need for the wide gulf between public and private lives.

Feminism and Marginality


Women who identify with feminism are usually those who are firmly
caught in the gulf that separates the expressive private realm from the instrumental
public one. Although all people- men and women, old and young, black and
white find their lives divided into two in a technocratic society, middle class
college educated women experienced the plight of marginality earlier than most
and became feminists. They were bombarded with the double message to be
assertive, creative, independent (all instrumental) and supportive sensitive, gentle
(all expressive). Few of these women found institutional structures that would
integrate home and work worlds. They tried to juggle both roles, shifting back
and forth between the sweet, deferring girl and the independent quick witted
woman. A case can be made that feminism is at the center of the subjective and
structural rises of modernity. While all people must confront, be a greater or
lesser degree, the ambivalences and ambiguities engendered by modernity, the
woman question combines these confrontations in multiple ways. Female
represents an ascribed categorization recognized as defining a being who is
different and separate from, and in most societies subordinate to male.

Modern presuppositions define humanity in non ascriptive terms, but


females in modern society have conventionally been perceived as not quite-
belonging to the same species as males by virtue of their biological distinctiveness
from males. Differences in anatomy, in the part played in the birth process and in
physical strength have been socially defined and taken for granted as significant in
human as well as sexual identity (self concept) and sexual identification
(definition of self by others). Power has been allocated to males in a hierarchal
order and females have been typically apprehended as sub-ordinate others. Such a
perception of females is clearly at odds with modern, universalistic achievement
promises about humanity. To the extent that ascriptive premises about women are
found in modern society, and to the degree that power is monopolized by males in
that society, females typically find themselves caught between traditional and
modern identities regarding sexual and human natures. These women are the
archetypical marginals in modern society. The marginality women experience
today is more structural, that is, the women are caught in the dualism that runs
through the whole society. So, while modern assumptions about human nature
lessen the strict reading of an inherent biological dualism, at the same time the
society seems to be approaching an era of ever increasing dualism. Thus it is a
matter of coming to terms with the whole duality puzzle. From a strictly
structural view, the middle class college educated women experience a
marginality that produces discrepant expectations about the role of women; these
discrepancies promote an awareness of the unequal treatment of men and women;
and such awareness sets the stage for the emergence of feminist consciousness.

Inspection of the sociological literature on marginality reveals differences


in interpretation about the consequences of marginal social location for
personality development. On the one hand, marginality has been interpreted as
inducing demoralization, a tendency toward deviance, a lack of incentive
feelings of resentment, alienation and anomie. On the other hand, marginality
has been viewed as resulting in a debunking orientation toward social reality, a
sharper critical ability, a detached and rational world view, a wider horizon
keener intelligence, the cosmopolitan role and higher creative capacity. Perhaps
marginality in social location the experience of being caught between two
different social cultural orientations and at the same time participating by
inclination or necessity in both enables individuals to have a lesser hold on an
unshakable, taken-for-granted reality. From this vantage point of relative distance,
from a single embracing world view, they have more opportunity to
see-by-contrast the world that others take as given, as the world. This distance
prompts the individual to develop awareness of the precariousness of social
reality; this awareness may lead to a habit of critical insight, cynicism or both.

Marginality implies the potential for dual internalizations, that is, dualized
values, interests, life styles, identities, relevance structures, and the like, a
potential that has consequences for personality articulation. The personality may
remain dualized or become a synthesis of the two fold internalizations, depending
on the nature of the discrepancies between the two structures involved. If the
personality remains dualized, either ambivalence or conflict may result unless the
discrepant reality is kept in place. Of course the two sources of internalizations
may diverge to a greater or lesser degree, the greater the clash between the two,
the greater the degree of conflict or sociological ambivalence (Merton, 1976).

The chances for duality if not fragmentation in general, in a modern


technological culture are far greater than in a traditional society. Marginality may
even be said to be alien to traditional societies except in the light of the role of
the stranger who stays. Marginality is rooted in larger social realities. This root
age must be kept in mind in approaching the possibilities for personality
articulation. Two conflicting spheres of relevance, located in divergent structures
may be subsumed or even neutralized by a larger, overarching world, taken for
granted.

Pluralism or increasing structural differentiation, which characterizes


modern urban technocratic societies, is the macro social fact that sets the
stage for increasing numbers of marginal personalities. As society becomes
increasingly differentiated, there is an increase in the possibilities for marginality,
because marginality implies being caught between at least one set of two
discrepant, salient structures. The greater the number of structures within
societal organization, the more structural interstices for individuals to find
themselves caught between. With progressive pluralization, more individuals may
find themselves spun-off, unable to fit comfortably in anyone embracing structure.

The feminist movement has given rise to a large body of theory, which
attempts to explain gender inequalities and set forth agendas for overcoming those
inequalities. Men and women are alike as human beings and yet categorically
different from each and culture. Feminism highlights the paradoxes rooted in the
situation of women. It not only aims for individual freedoms by mobilizing sex
solidarit but also attempts to describe omen s oppression, to e plain its causes
and consequences and to prescribe strategies for omen s liberation. Feminist
anal ses ha e al a s seen omen s access to earnings as an important source of
their greater autonomy and self-determination, because it lessens their economic
dependency on male earners within family-households.

Liberal Feminism

Liberal feminism looks for explanations of gender inequalities in social


and cultural attitudes. Liberal feminists are concerned with sexism and
discrimination against women in the workplace, educational institutions and
the media. They tend to focus their energies on establishing and protecting
equal opportunities for women through legislation and other democratic means.
It is claimed that female subjugation is rooted in a set of customary and
legal constrains that block omen s entrance in the public orld. Societies
false belief that women are by nature less intellectual and physically less capable
than men exclude them from academic, political and economic sphere, resulting in
exclusion. Liberals say society must provide women with the same civil
liberties and economic opportunities that men enjoy aside from equal opportunity
for education. Social inequalit , the sa , is not the result of nature s decree
but of societ s customs and traditions. Liberal feminists ant to free omen
from oppressive gender roles. They seek to work through the existing system
to bring about reform in a gradual way. In this respect they are more
moderate in their aims and methods than radical feminists as they are not
interested in the overthrow of patriarchy and capitalism but being
accommodative of the ability of women to make it within the system with a few
cosmetical changes.

Radical Feminism

Radical feminists believe that it is the patriarchal system that oppresses


women because the system characterises power, dominance, hierarchy and
competition. The analysis of patriarchy the systematic domination of females
by males is of central concern to this branch of feminism. Patriarchy is viewed as
a universal phenomenon that has existed across time and cultures. Radical
feminists often concentrate on the family as one of the primary sources of
omen s oppression in societ . The argue that men e ploit omen b rel ing
on the free domestic labour that women provide in the home. As a group, men
also deny women access to positions of power and influence in society.
Radical feminists differ in their interpretations of the basis of patriarchy,
but most agree that it in ol es the appropriation of omen s bodies and se ualit
in some form. Fueston, an earl feminist riter, argues that men control omen s
roles in reproduction and child-rearing. Because women are biologically able to
give birth to children, they become dependent materially on men for protection
and livelihood. Other radical feminists point to male violence against women as
central to male supremacy. According to such a view, domestic violence, rape
and sexual harassment are all part of the systematic oppression of women, rather
than isolated cases with their own psychological criminal roots. Even interactions
in daily life such as non-verbal communication, patterns of listening and
interrupting and omen s sense of comfort in public contribute to gender
inequality. Moreover, the argument goes, popular conceptions of beauty and
sexuality are imposed by men on women in order to produce a certain type of
femininity. For example, social and cultural norms emphasizing a slim body and
a caring, nurturing attitude to ards men help to pertuate omen s subordination.
Radical feminists believe that gender equality can only be attained by
overthrowing the patriarchal order (Singh, 1997).

There is a growing awareness among nations that women need to


play a significant role in all aspects of development process. Trained and educated
on sound lines, women become an asset in accelerating economic growth and
in ensuring social change in desired directions, as education develops basic skills
and abilities and fosters a value system conducive to national development goals.
It is believed that education and vocational training for women will enable them
not only to seek jobs and become economically independent but also exhibit their
talents in all walks of life. The independence will reduce their stress, bring
fundamental changes in their values and believes and make them bold enough to
demand and standup for their rights. The present demand of the women for the
provision of increasing opportunities outside home is the shift over from the
traditional role of the women subservient to menfolk to the neotraditional phase,
in which the women have been up in revolt against all types of exploitation
reiterating their equality with men in all fields of rights and responsibilities
ranging from education, employment, health, institutionalized welfare facilities,
coupled with the participation of women at different levels of social and national
activity. Then emerged a highly developed society based on harmonious
relations, allowing no exploitation, economic, intellectual or otherwise by
eliminating all traditional taboos, that have led to restricting the omen s life to
certain spheres only.

Fortunately, in the past 200 years various socio-economic cultural


movements have spearheaded the struggle against this discrimination and
oppression, and the struggle for omen s liberation has been gaining ground. In
India, the national movement under the leadership of Mahatama Gandhi was one
of the first attempts to draw Indian women out of the restricted circles of domestic
life into equal roles ith men. In the ords of Gandhi, Woman in the companion
of man gifted with equal mental capacities. She has the right to participate in the
minutest details of the activities of man, she has the same right of freedom and
libert as he . The ad ancement on the economic, social, political and cultural
fronts and the conversion of tradition-bound society into a modern one are
pervasive throughout the society. Social transformation, a whole metamorphosis
of habits, a wrenching reorientation of values concerning time, status, money,
work and unweaving and reweaving of the fabric of daily existence, is necessary.

Pandit Nehru once said that in order to awaken the people, it is women
who have to be awakened. Once they are on the move, the household moves, the
village moves, the country moves. Social and cultural values which were once
accepted as part of one s life are no assaulted as outmoded and irrele ant to
modern conditions. Since women are regarded as having special responsibility in
safeguarding the value system, their education should not only be encouraged but
should help them to effect a healthy synthesis between all that is most enduring
and valuable in the old ways of life and the great advantages which modern
knowledge and techniques of production and administration can bring about.
There is no denying the fact that no society can change without the consent of and
a consensus among women.

Process of change in omen s position depend primaril on the


interrelation between transformative factors and forces, spontaneous of
consciously directed, and the inherited matrix of social and cultural institutions,
values, norms and practices, forms of production and distribution. These are
manifested in the division of resources, labour and power (Jayaswal, 1992, pp.
142-145). The world today is facing both the quantitative and qualitative changes
quantitative in term of economic growth and technological change and
qualitative in terms of a new paradigm of a society governed by altogether
different sets of values and methods. The traditional Indian values expected
women to be subordinate altruistic and self-sacrificing whereas their new jobs and
positions expect them to be independent, self-confident and assertive. It results in
conflict in values.

There are three groups of women. Those who are traditional in appearance
but modern and rational in their thought belong to the first group. The second
group consists of women who are modern in their appearance but very narrow-
minded in their outlook, whereas the third group constitutes women, who are both
traditional and modern. They act according to the tastes of the people around
them. So a woman cannot be, what she actually wants to be. She has to behave
according to the whims of her parents before marriage and her husband, in-laws
and children after marriage. Because of ambivalent status, a women cannot have
conviction of her own. Social situation has made women uncertain and as a result
they are in a confused state.

A state of ambivalence is observed in the major areas like career, marriage,


decision making, gender issues and freedom. Apart from this outward appearance
also holds a significant place since women are in a dilemma to go for fashion or
remain traditional. This study uses the concepts, methodologies and theories in
Sociology and Women Studies which are applicable to Indian conditions. It
studies the unstable state of mind of women in their practical life.

Objectives:

1) To study the level of traditionality and modernity in the life style of


women teachers.

2) To find out whether women teachers like to preserve tradition or go for


modernity.

3) To study the modernity principles related to freedom, self-determination,


gender and marriage.
4) To find out the changes in values, customs and behaviour patterns of
women teachers.

5) To measure the ambivalence existing among women teachers on tradition


and modernity.

Methodology
The researcher studied the ambivalent situation of women with regard to
tradition and modernity. Career and non career women have different levels of
thought regarding tradition and modernity. Even among career women the
attitudes differ according to the profession or work they do. For this study, women
in teaching profession especially the teachers in co-educational colleges were
selected not only because they have the advantage of dealing with the younger
generation (boys and girls) who are in the crucial stage of transition from
tradition to modernity but also they are the ones who update their knowledge
according to the present trend and lead a modern way of life. Added to this,
change in life style could also be seen among the college teachers as they have a
higher economic position and educational level. By and large, teaching has been
accepted as a profession as it possesses a systematic body of theory, professional
authority, communit s appro al and has a culture of its o n. Teaching as one
of the first professions open to middle class Indian women. It is also considered
as a feminine profession due to sex role stereotype. Hence women teachers were
confined to be the unit of the study.

Selection of Area of Study and its Significance

Madurai city was chosen as the research site as it is considered to be a


place where the traditional and modern social forces interact. It also maintains the
identity of Tamil culture and at the same time has assimilated various cultural
traits of people with whom it came into contact during different periods.

Madurai is the second largest city next to Chennai. It is situated on the


banks of the river Vaigai. The district consists of many towns and villages with a
population of 25,62,279. It has religious and historic importance. The famous
Meenakshi Amman Temple is in the heart of the city symbolizing the essence
of Tamil art and culture. Mariamman Teppakulam, Thirumalai Naicker Mahal,
Pudu Mandapam and Gandhi Museum are some of the places of historic
importance here. Moreover one can see the co-existence of all socio-economic
combinations of people in Madurai. Madurai city has many schools, colleges,
hospitals, factories, mills, industries and a University too. Since this is an indepth
micro study, the area of study was limited to one district.

Compilation of Population and Research Design

The universe includes the women teachers working in co-educational


colleges in Madurai District. It is a census study as it constitutes only 137 women
teachers working on permanent basis in co-educational colleges in the District of
Madurai. Among 137 women teachers, the researcher was able to meet only 135,
because two teachers were not available during the period of data collection due to
child birth and health problem. Regarding research design, explanatory design
has been adopted by the researcher as it is considered to be the suitable design for
the study. Analytical frame work of the present research sufficiently covers the
basic aspects of the phenomena under study and it further tries to analyse the
causal relations in a qualitative manner. Hence the present study is qualitatively
explanatory in character. It helps to study the existence of ambivalence and to
measure the level and changes based on the data.

Tools and Techniques of Data Collection

This study is mainly based on primary data. The interview technique and
observation are used for data collection so that more information can be gathered
from conversation and gestures of the respondents. The respondents were
interviewed both at home and in their work place. Face to face contact in the
interview helped to understand the real ambivalent situation of the respondents.
As good rapport was established, the respondents freely revealed their thoughts
and attitudes and also shared their experiences with the researcher. This helped the
researcher to understand the perception of the respondents with regard to tradition
and modernity.

Pre-testing
Validity and reliability of the interview schedule was ensured by
undertaking a pre-test. In this regard, the researcher selected 20 women teachers
from an area which has similar characteristics of the present study area.
According to their response, the questions were modified and re-arranged in order
to get accurate and authentic response from the respondents.

Analysis of the Data

The data was analysed both qualitatively and quantitatively in order to


accurately measure the ambivalent state of mind of women teachers. Statistical
analysis through coding process also enriched and enhanced the data by various
means. Inductive method of reasoning was applied to derive inference and
generalizations are based on it.

Limitations and Difficulties

1. This study purely pertains to Tamil Nadu cultural pattern.

2. The researcher had to wait for long hours in order to meet the teachers in
between the class hours without disturbing their work schedule.

3. It was not only difficult for the researcher to meet the respondents in their
work place but also at home because in the former case they were busy
with the students and their academic work and in the latter they were busy
in their household work.

4. The study is made from the perspective of women teachers and not a
comparative study with male teachers.

5. The omen teachers orking in professional and in omen s colleges are


excluded and only those working in co-educational Arts and Science
Colleges are studied here.

Inspite of all these difficulties, by convincing talk and good rapport, the
researchers was able to interact with the respondents and collect valid information
from them.

Chapterization

1. The introductory chapter includes the meaning, significance, theoretical


explanation, objectives, methodology and limitation of the study.
2. The second chapter consists of review of various studies based on tradition
and modernity.
3. The third chapter deals with socio-economic profile of women teachers in
the light of the variables such as age, religion, caste, education, income,
marital status etc.
4. The fourth chapter analyses the level of traditionality and modernity
among women teachers.
5. The fifth chapter deals with the social parameters and tradition modern
dichotomy.
6. The sixth chapter measures the ambivalence existing among women
teachers on tradition and modernity.
7. The seventh chapter is the concluding part with the summary of the
findings.
MADURAI DISTRICT MAP

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