Chapter - I Introduction and Methodology
Chapter - I Introduction and Methodology
Chapter - I Introduction and Methodology
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.
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
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).
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.
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 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
Radical Feminism
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.
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.
Objectives:
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.
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.
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.
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