PATRIARCHY
PATRIARCHY
Introduction
Patriarchy is a social system in which the role of male as the primary authority is
central. It refers to a system where men have authority over women, children and
political, and economic institutions of different cultures. Patriarchy also has had a
strong influence on modem civilization, notwithstanding the fact that many cultures
have moved towards a more egalitarian social system over the past century (Malti-
Douglas). Literally meaning "rule of fathers," (Ferguson 1048), the term 'patriarchy'
was initially used to refer to autocratic rule by the male head of a family. However, in
modem times, it more generally refers to social systems in which power is primarily
societies were relatively more egalitarian and that patriarchal social stmctures did not
develop until many years after the end of the Pleistocene era, following social and
However, according to Robert M. Strozier, historical research has not yet found a
specific "initiating event" of the origin of patriarchy. Some scholars point to the
into being six thousand years ago. Domination of women by men is found even in the
Ancient Near East as far back as 3100 BCE, as there were restrictions imposed on a
woman's reproductive capacity.There is also the evidence of her exclusion fi-om "the
(Strozier 46)
thereby suggesting that women's role was to reproduce and serve men in the
household.lt was believed that male domination of women was natural and virtuous
(Fishbein 27).
femininity is the political difference between freedom and subjection" (Pateman 207).
In feminist theory, however, the concept of patriarchy often includes all the social
mechanisms that reproduce and exert male dominance over women. Feminist theory
and contend that social and cultural conditioning is primarily responsible for
establishing male and female gender roles (Sandersom 198). According to standard
passed down from generation to generation. These constructions are most pronounced
gender messages conveyed by family, mass media and other institutions largely
primarily determined by genetics and that patriarchy comes into being more as a
result of inherent biology than social conditioning. He also contends that patriarchy is
studies of every society that has ever been observed explicitly state that these feelings
were present and there is literally no variation at all" (Goldberg). Any attempt to
define patriarchy explains the reasons for the subordination of women through the
ages and its bearing on their future and success in life. Patriarchy not only explains
how our society functions but also as to how it controls women. It is best defined as
'control' by men. Its opposite is 'matriarchy,' where women are in charge and act as
heads of families. The culture of the majority of the countries including India is
Women must constantly fight for their rights and at times even struggle just to
survive without power. The majority of the world leaders are a living testimony to the
fact that patriarchy reigns supreme. Nevertheless, given an opportunity, women can
be as powerful as men are. For average women, on the contrary, it would be a distant
dream to be on par with men simply because men have the advantage of a culturally
conditioned mindset.
norms. With such beliefs instilled into cultural mindset, women scarcely stand a
in family traditions and gets reinforced through practices such as women adopting the
surname of their husbands and children too carrying their father's last name. This
practice is gradually on the wane as more women are now choosing to keep their
maiden names, or hyphenate it via prefixing it with their married name, so that they
can retain their individual identity. In majority of families, the man financially
supports a family while the woman stays at home taking care of children.
Some sacred texts accord them an exalted status by stating that gods live where
Durga, Kali, Chandi, etc.), woman is believed to represent power (Shakti), and evoke
both fear and reverence. She can protect and at the same time can also wreak
vengeance. If pleased, she can fulfill every wish, but when annoyed, she can unleash
unimaginable terror. Male gods at times find themselves helpless before her and
cannot dare to intervene especially when she has decided to act as power incarnate.
Most of her attributes are believed to be embedded in every woman. However, there is
yet another profile of woman sanctified by religious writings and folklore wherein she
falsehood, folly, greed, trickery, impurity, and also thoughtless action. She is also
regarded as the root of all evil.It is because of her supposedly inconsistent character
that she has to be kept under strict control. Being fragile, she needs protection at all
stages of her life, for instance, in childhood by her father, in youth by her husband,
and in old age (after the husband's death), by her sons. As evident, these two images
are contradictory—the tilt in the accepted stereotypes being toward the negative and
derogatory aspect. Tulsidas, the well known poet, in one of his oft-quoted stanzas,
lumps women with the dumb, the unlettered, the shudras (outcastes) and cattle, who
deserve persecuted.Being allegedly the inferior sex, women have had to forego
privileges and rights that are regarded as exclusively the male prerogative.
pervasive and has invaded the worldview and ethos of almost the entire Indian
society. There are, of course, some exceptions which permit a greater measure of
equality and freedom to women. There are certain areas in which control is exercised
on women. First of all their sexuality is controlled much more strictly than men's.
Women are defined homogeneously as well as reductively and are attributed certain
attitudes which bring disgrace both to the family in which they are bom and the one
into which they are married. Their marriage before the onset of puberty is a ploy to
ensure their virginity as well as control their sexuality and over reproduction, i.e.,
restrictions are imposed on woman's movement and the contact that she
maintains/wants to maintain with the outside world. Implicit in this are the attempts to
ensure that woman should not yield to any temptation and must not transgress sexual
norms. Women, at the lower rung of society have to take up all kinds of work to meet
their family needs and this necessitates their movement outside the precincts and their
home. They are vulnerable and are subjected to various types of discrimination and
exploitation by the society steeped in patriarchal ethos. Women from middle and
upper middle class families are not spared by the patriarchal set-up.
majority of women, skilled labour is their main resource. They may be wage-earners
engaged in outdoor work, or participants in family craft, or may have special skills
that bring them recognition and can be gainfully used. However, one may pertinently
ask: a) how much of their earnings can they spend at will? b) how much can they
save volitionally? and c) how much do they have to contribute to the pool of family
earning? The answer to all such queries has to be in the negative especially because
there is nothing such as 'woman's will' existent in the world we live in.
The manner in which control is exercised on women in particular largely
depends on social structure. The interplay of historical, economic, social and political
dominance and female subordination. Upon getting married, the bride leaves her
paternal moorings and becomes member of the family into which she is married.
Children bom to her belong to her husband's lineage. Authority within the family is
vested in the males, most often in the eldest male who is the principal decision maker.
irrespective of heir being experienced, strong-willed and mature.Most often they are
In India, most tribal groups are patrilineal, but interestingly, patriarchy is not a
clearly pronounced trait in them—the exceptions being the families of rulers and
chieftains which are male-dominated. Since the tribal women have to work in the
forests and fields, they have considerable freedom of movement and share economic
responsibility equally. They may outwardly seem to accept male superiority but
enjoy more freedom compared to their urban counterparts. India has small pockets of
political power generally rests with men. Land alongside other property is inherited
through female lineage; but its management rests with men. The matrilineal system
does endow women with special sense of dignity and status; however, male and
Khasi saying: "War and politics are for men while property and children are for
women" (Dube 109). Among them, the rulers, the chiefs, and power-wielding
"elders" are all male, but women have important economic roles to perform. Khasi
women, for example, run small shops and engage in local trade. The Nayar women,
who form part of the Hindu society of Kerala landlords or non-cultivating tenants,
were home-bound whereas their men took up military service. In their Tarawad
(matrilineal joint household among Nayars of Kerala), property was owned and
inherited by women, but it was looked after by the Kctrnovor (the manager) who
would always be a male. This practice is much the same among the matrilineal
and Kamataka where women were entitled to headship of the family. Matrilineality is
under stress as contemporary social practices have been effecting certain changes in
mobility and new employment opportunities are some of the major factors for change.
In units comprising husband, wife and children especially located in alien settings,
matrilineality cannot work in quite the same way as it did in a traditional setting. Even
the Nayar Tarawads are disintegrating because new legislation has altered the
underlying principle of marriage and has conferred on individuals the right to a share
in ancestral property. Taking into account self-earned property, the Khasis have also
been initiating changes in their law. However, matrilineal ideology is not likely to be
totally eroded because women who will continue to perpetuate the line, will have a
share in ancestral property, and will demand the status and respect that was conferred
"women's work" (Dube 110). The management of the household invariably remains
within women's sphere. If they cannot hire domestic help (as only a few can afford
it), women must handle aJJ the domestic chores like drawing water, cooking, cleaning
the house, washing the clothes of men and children as well as their own, and looking
after the children. Men are usually ridiculed if found undertaking any of these
fianctions. A man may do so only when the wife is away or ill and if there is no other
woman to take charge. This notion is so deeply ingrained that even working women
are expected to continue looking after household affairs in addition to their jobs.
Notably, many women have a sense of inadequacy, if not of guilt, when they cannot
attend to their domestic responsibilities. Men, on the other hand, are supposed to look
after the affairs of the world outside the home. They are expected to provide for the
However in the lower strata of society women have a substantial share in the
economic pursuits of the family. They may not till the land, but contribute in diverse
roles in carrying out the traditional craft. Their contribution to the household
economy thus, cannot be ignored. In social groups at the higher rung of society, men
used to be the providers, but even this scenario is undergoing change as women are
entering public services and professions thereby earning as much as men do. The
trend has to be accepted; partly because of increasing cost of living and the demands
of higher-standard of living. The emerging ethos does not favour patriarchy, but the
vestiges of the past refiise to disappear completely. Society too trying hard to adapt
itself in accordance with the altered scenario, howsoever slow the pace of adaptation
may be.
The patrilineal Hindu society expects a woman to have certain virtues, chastity
being one of them. Before marriage, a woman is not allowed to think of any man in
(husband as God) reigning supreme in the popular mindset. Women observe several
fasts to ensure that they get the same husband life after life. Such fasts also include
prayers for the long life of the husband, so that the wife does not have to undergo the
sufferings of widowhood.Though, there is a legal ban on the practice, Sati sites are
often developed into shrines where fairs are held to attract huge crowds. The third
virtue is that, a wife is expected to mould herself as per the traditions of the family
into which she is married and merge her individual identity into that of her husband's.
After all, she is meant to be her husband's "shadow" who is supposed to follow him
all through her life and who must stand by him come what may. The infertility of a
is all too visible in the lower classes, but also persists in upper strata of society. Even
after six decades of independence, one frequently reads of bride burning and dowry
deaths. Other forms of violence are: heaping indignities on the wife and her relations
by the in-laws, making her do physical work beyond her capacity, failing to provide
her adequate nutrition, and even torturing her mentally on several pretexts. Even
attracted the attention of social reformers, many of whom have come out in support of
their cause. Some of the medieval saint-poets preached the gospel of extending more
humane and just treatment to women. Social and religious reform movements like
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Brahmo Samaj, Prathana Samaj, and Arya Samaj emphasized the rights and status of
women in their agenda. These were generally against social injustice and were
especially mindful of the problems of women viz., child marriage, ill treatment of
constitution. It ensures equality for all before law and prohibits discrimination on
grounds of religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birth. It also guarantees freedom of
religion, i.e., the right to freely profess, practice, and propagate religion. This
provision of religious freedom takes away much of the freedom and equality accorded
to women by the constitution especially because family and personal law is rooted in
socio-religious codes denying women equal rights within the family, or to property, or
family. The rising democracies dominated by capitalism opened a window for her to
get acquainted with the political world but she was denied the right to exercise her
interpretations of social dynamics took women's cause along with the cause of
proletariat but she still remained on the periphery of politics of power. In India too,
the position of women was no better as a peculiar claustrophobia confined her within
The freedom struggle in India did not lead to the awakening of women to the
Fundamental Rights Resolution of the Indian National Congress stated that freedom,
justice, dignity and equality for women were essential for nation building. These ideas
were also enshrined in the constitution of India. However, in the decades after
independence, women found to their dismay that, as in case of other deprived sections
of society, the rights that were guaranteed in the constitution remained on paper alone.
Merely right to vote did not change their marginalized status. The right to decision
remained distant dreams. Even though Indian woman is gradually becoming visible
on all the indices of social growth, yet her upward mobility remains seriously
restricted only to big towns and cities where women feel academically and
acquired a modicum of individual liberty also as the urban environment accords them
more space in comparison to closed rural societies. Nevertheless, even urban women
also find themselves in fetters as their families are embedded in patriarchal values.
Rural women, on the other hand, have to follow the age-old routine of performing day
today family chores alongwith enduring domestic violence which is not only verbal
Kate Millet in Sexual Politics blamed the social scientists who helped create
ideology of sex roles disguised as scientific description (25). Freud not only reduced
the role of female life to sexual re-production, but also stated that women live at a low
cultural level. For Erikson too, woman is "destined to bear the offspring of chosen
men and with it, a biological, psychological and ethical commitment to take care of
human infancy" (Erikson). According to Joseph Rheingold, "Anatomy decrees the life
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of a woman" (Rheingold 714). These views from men, who are assumed to be
perception of woman. They not only view woman reductively but also evince paucity
of other alternatives. Family, the fundamental unit of society, can also be seen as
reduces woman to an object of barter thereby undermining her right to name children
after her.
The societal set-up unfortunately is not liberal enough to seriously address the
problems faced by women. It still conforms to archaic patriarchal laws and customs.
identity of her own. If at all she dares to question the patriarchal norms, she has to
face violence, which takes many forms from physical assault to psychological
economic aspects to it. Since woman is an object not only of lust, but of vanity as
in the society at large. Through romantic love too, man manipulates her emotionally
and exploits her endlessly. As long as patriarchy treats woman as a sexual commodity
for consumption, she can never think in terms of attaining selfhood and actualizing
her real potential. In the past, control over women's sexuality was linked to hereditary
rights, but women no longer wear chastity belts in the present times. However, one
has to be mindful of the fact that the control now is subtler, more complex. The early
feminists' emphases remained on the right of the woman to refusal of sex rather than
her right to seek sexual satisfaction on her own terms. They knew as to how the body
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and its pleasures acquire a certain historical and cultural significance contrary to
patriarchal belief, and also that sex is not merely a biological conditioning but also
these ideas seem to 'naturalize' male sexual behavior. To view women as responsible
for men's violence enables men to evade responsibility and insist that they were
misled or provoked. A wide range of coercive practices are regarded as normal form
of heterosexual behavior. For instance, the notion that women are incapable of
deciding for themselves their state of sexual arousal prompts the idea that they have to
be seduced by a man into wanting sex. Moreover, linking of sex not only to the
physical but also the emotional aspect, or the assumption that sex is a bargain, results
in woman paying a heavy price. Apart from this, woman (as wife) is also impelled to
perform sex as a 'duty,' or as part of what the 'husband' expects of her in return to the
perceived as unsuitable for management tasks. Thus, a womzin socialized into roles
that train her to be co-operative, finds herself in conflict with the work situation that
Patriarchal economy made man ambitious and selfish and that is why he
exploited his most eternal and intimate partner, 'the woman'. He made her an object
name children after her. In this way, the entire class of women lost its identity in
Patriarchal norms have also disturbed the balance of equation between the sexes.
Precious economic and monetary resources by and large tilt the balance in favour of
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the male sex. Other factors such as the sexist stereotyping of woman in many sectors
growth thereby disallowing her free choice. Moreover, power has always been
associated with patriarchy and women have never been allowed to wield the sceptre
of power; instead they have been manipulated via emphatic attribution of the qualities
such as beauty, purity, virtue, virginity, etc. The politics of this all becomes largely
evident as the intention remains only to confine rather than emancipate her from
values. The envisioning of four stages of human life as per Hindu way of life has no
meaning for a woman as she is endlessly tethered to one stage all her life as a home
maker. Thus, the choices offered to woman are limited. Howsoever hard she tries,
woman has to remain subservient to man -be that father, husband, or son—all through
her life.
The idea of a male sex role goes back to the 19"^ century debates about sex
doctrine of innate difference between the male and female sex. Women's exclusion
fi-om universities was justified by the claim that the feminine mind was too delicately
poised to handle the rigours of academic work. And that the resulting mental
disturbance would be impairing their capacities to be good wives and mothers. The
first generation of women who violated this doctrine questioned its presuppositions by
researching the differences in mental capacities between men and women. They found
very few.
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patriarchy. There are two ways in which this concept can be applied to gender. In one,
the roles are seen as specific to define situations by detailed descriptions of script
following the courtship with marriage. Much more common, however, is the second
expectations that are attached to one's sex - the 'sex role'. According to this
approach, there are always two sex roles in any cultural context—male and female.
remained the first theme in the initial detailed discussions about male sex role. For the
most part, the first generation of sex role theorists assumed that the man-woman roles
were well defined, that socialization went ahead harmoniously and that sex roles
contributed to social stability, mental health, and the performance of necessary social
institutions, sex-role norms and actual personalities. It was, however, the political
complacency of this framework, rather than the 'sex role' concept itself that was
disrupted by feminism. Indeed sex role research bloomed as never before with the
growth of academic feminism. But it was now generally assumed that the female sex
role was oppressive and that the role internalization was a means of putting girls and
The picture of the male sex role painted in most of literary works was quite
conventional and it was not surprising as social dynamics changed. Rather, the male
sex role literature assembled familiar items such as feminist criticism of men, media
images of masculinity, paper and pencil tests of attitudes, findings of sex differences
and autobiographical anecdotes about sport, and called the assembly a 'role.'
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Expectation management between the sexes escalated and there was little attempt to
investigate the effects of this expectation in social life. The novel in particular made a
connection between the subordination of women and the hierarchy of power among
men, especially the oppression of women. But in other parts of the male role genre,
there was ambivalence about woman and a cunning willingness to silence the
commitment to feminism.
governments, corporations, media, better jobs for men, incomes, and command of
wealth, men's control of the means of violence and the entrenched ideologies that
pushed women into home and dismissed their claims for equality. There is, of course,
family as the site of women's oppression. Theorists and activists documented wives'
unpaid labour, mothers' imprisonment in the house, and men's prerogatives in daily
life. Many feminists experimented with new family arrangements often trying to
negotiate with men a new division of labour and a new system of child care.
With the passage of time, however, western feminism's picture of men shifted
from the domestic patriarch consuming unpaid labour to focus on men's aggression
against women. Women's shelters spread awareness about domestic violence and
campaigns against rape argued that every man is a potential rapist. Anti-pornography
feminism carried these further, seeing men's sexuality as pervasively violent and
that is violent and not just a deviant group also spread in feminist peace movements
formulations masculinity is virtually equated with the exercise of power in its most
naked forms. Men continue to draw a patriarchal dividend in the metropolis as well as
in peripheral locales. In almost all regions of the world, men virtually monopolize the
elite levels of the corporate and the state power. Heterosexual men of all classes are in
a position to command sexual services from women, through purchase, custom, force
technology. The extension of this pattern of patriarchy across the world often erodes
women in the 19"^ century. This follows from the patriarchal structuring of culture
itself, as well as from the fact that gender politics first became a mass politics in
women's struggle, or a series of struggles for property rights, for their suffrage and for
writer's works, this sense of unfolding of a great historical drama gave resonance to
otherwise modest reform proposals and vague rhetoric of change. Most of the writers
implied that masculinity was in crisis and that crisis itself would drive change
forward. In other words, the bell of resisting patriarchy started ringing, howsoever
faintly.
arrangements into being. Thus, feminism is more than just contesting the discursive
creating peaceable households and co-operative child care, and so on. If labour
movement tried to create more democratic work places, anti-colonial movements built
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structures of self-governance. All of these movements created new cultural forms and
the gender order. Pursuing social justice in power relations means contesting men's
predominance in the state, professions and management and ending men's violence
against women. It also means changing the institutional structures that make elite
power and physical violence possible in the first place. Social justice in the gender
division of labour means ending the patriarchal dividend in the economy, sharing the
burden of domestic work and equalizing access to education and training. However,
pursuing social justice in the structure of catharsis implies ending the stigma of sexual
strategic thinking that flowed from earlier models of patriarchy. In the context of the
and girls can displace the same men's gender specific interests in supremacy. The
pattern of change in patriarchy in metropolitan cities means that the familiar array of
There exists the paradox of the politics of masculinity and the reactionary
gender politics in the state and mass media alongside the displacement of the pro-
feminist groups. Nevertheless, one may also observe progressive shifts in many
masculinity reaching new levels of precision and sophistication. The current decade
has not seen any lessening of patriarchal politics than the previous decades. Men
intersections in gender relations. The present era evinces considerable strain between
men and women. It is because both sexes have started to reassess old roles, and men
in particular have started to try to come to terms with the changes demanded by
with their own values and needs, casting aside old role models. Men must introspect
and understand women in order to know who they are and what they expect from life.
where there is an imbalance of power between the two sexes, man being the colonizer
and the woman colonized. Women in ancient India were relatively freer and more
woman shared all her husband's privileges and was his companion and helpmate in
most of his activities. This situation continued even after the Vedic age (1500-500
BC). It is only when we reach the time of Manu (supposed to have lived in the 5"^
Century BC) that we find women regarded as a property. To quote Manu: "Her father
protects (her) in childhood, her husband protects (her) in her youth and her sons
Now the question arises as to why did women lose their high position; and
why did Manu deprecate them? Historians point that it was after the Aryan invasion
(before 1500 BC) that women started losing their high status in society. Whatever be
the cause, women were gradually denied rights and were given a status inferior to that
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of men. Many norms and conventions restricted an orthodox Hindu woman's life until
very recent times. But with the arrival of the suffragette movement in England in
early 20'*' century, Indian freedom movement and the Feminist movement in France
during the 1960's which had a global impact, women in India seem to have risen from
hibernation and have responded positively to feminist issues in the recent decades.
The present day Indian middle class woman seems to be torn between western
practices and Indian culture. She appears to be in a dilemma. The situation has
become even more volatile with dowry deaths, rapes and increased atrocities against
women. Perhaps it is this situation which has made educated women articulate about
their marginalized status through writing. In a phallocratic culture, what forces a dis-
Incidentally, it is this effort to mark her as inferior, which provides a woman the
perhaps the resultant factor of women's concerted efforts against patriarchy for the
past two hundred years or so. Broadly speaking, feminism is the fight for equality
with men or women's struggle to establish themselves as human beings and not to be
and power for men and women, challenging both sexism and the capitalist system,
against any social setup which produces female subordination. Defining feminism is
in man's claim" (Felman). J.R. Richards is of the view that "Feminism is a belief in
the unjust treatment of women by the society" (Richards). There are complexities
1960's, and has certainly paved way for an initiative by women to voice their
ideologies of gender like motherhood, mothering, marriage, etc. First world feminism
attempts to locate the alliances, blindness and successes of the early feminist
Being advanced, women in the West perhaps enjoy better privileges than their Indian
academics, and motherhood. The suffragette movement and feminist movement are
issues related to women's emancipation have been dealt with in developed countries
like Britain, France, America - issues such as abortion, child bearing, lesbianism,
marriage, femininity and its construction, sexuality, gender construction and bias.
Thus, it is quite apparent here that the cardinal aim of the first world feminism
perhaps had been to emancipate women all over the world, establish harmony and
facilitate a homogenous universe where male and female complement each other as
Kate Millet, one of the chief spokespersons for the Anglo-American criticism
radically explores the power hierarchies prevalent in a sexist culture. Her Sexual
Politics (1969) is the elaboration of a single statement: "the process whereby the
ruling sex seeks to maintain and extend its power over the subordinate sex" (Moi).
Mary Ellman, another prominent Anglo-American critic highlights the fact that
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Western culture posits things which Ellman calls 'thought by sexual analogy'. Her
ample evidence for thought by sexual analogy - feminists indenting occur through
expressions of anger only. Interestingly, the approaches and views of Millet and
Ellman provide the basic ground for women criticism, where the art of reading is
viewed as an interface between the life of the author and the life of the reader. But in
the works of Elaine Showalter, Ellen Mores, Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar, one
goals and activities from a gynocentric standpoint, driving home the point that
women's culture should not be mistaken for a sub-culture. They try to exhibit the
"Some Notes on Defining a Feminist Literary Criticism" (1975) was one of the
we can clearly label as 'feminine mode', then we are honour bound also to delineate
women, but sadly most Indian middle class women still appear to be contented and
happy as daughters, wives and mothers in an overall patriarchal society, and any
feminist ideology could not free them from the chains of segregation. The educated
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urban women in India are hardly aware of the living conditions of the masses of the
rural women. There seems to be among them, however, a growing frustration about
patriarchal and 'feudal' customs and institutions like dowry and the marriage system.
Often these frustrations come out in an indirect and subdued way when questions of
marriage or employment arise, i.e., when they face an actual conflict between their
It seems that the number of urban middle class women, who are complaining
about contradictory stress and strain upon them, has been on the rise. This may be
because of the fact that due to economic crisis more middle class women are forced to
regarding their family roles have not undergone much change. The spread of
education among middle class women coupled with a shrinking job market has not
reduced but rather sharpened the conflicts between a rigid patriarchal family system
and the new expectations of women. So far these conflicts have remained on the
individual level. They have not generated a broad movement of protest against
individualized and hidden rebellion which has not yet found a manifest social
Compared with the problems of sheer survival which a large section of Indian
women face, the issue of the role conflicts of the educated urban middle class women
appears to be peripheral. In these role conflicts, the broader and older contradictions
of the social system find their manifestations within the life of the individuals. These
contradictions in the contemporary Indian society, sharpened under the impact of the
economic crisis, are not to be understood if one looks at them only fi-om an economic
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point of view. They are as much due to the pervasiveness of a system of male
dominance, which is much older than the present economic system. It is precisely the
patriarchal system which constitutes the link between rural and urban women, though
both are affected by it in different ways and in varying degrees. The deterioration of
the living conditions of the rural women is not only an outcome of the overall
pauperization process affecting the poor Indian peasants but also of the specific
oppression of women which is part of'feudal' and patriarchal structures. On the other
hand, no matter how educated they are, urban women are still tied down by the same
The present study does not mirror only the cases of Indian society, but also
suggests that women all over the world remain a widely oppressed section. The
Women in India constitute a great mass of illiterate and powerless humanity. Female
literacy is quite low as compared to males' literacy. In the post independence era,
women were chiefly seen as recipient of benefits and welfare measures. But it was in
the late seventies that they began to be seen as agents of development. Their clarion-
call could be felt through their writings. However, the development process was
dowry deaths, custodian and gang rape is a mere preview into the much deeper
place where woman should have security and care but unfortunately it is a place
where she suffers discrimination, harassment and violence. Traditionally, they have
25
been conditioned to accept an inferior role and dependent status. Tliere is a strong
preference for the male child, whereas the girl child faces discrimination from birth.
he also made a compelling study of the process of social formation of male and
female identities and gave the basic Marxist explanation for the oppression of women.
According to him, within the frame work of industrial revolution, the fundamental
contributions to society, the devaluation of their role in the production process, man's
superior status hinging on patriarchy along with the reduction of women to their
structure. In fact, Engels characterized the transformation of women into property and
the disappearance of mother's rights as the world's historical defeat of the female sex
The emancipation of women and their equality with men are impossible and
must remain so as long as women are excluded from socially productive work
large social scale, and when domestic duties require their attention only to a
The words of feminist novelist, Virginia Woolf resonated with the same ideas in
1929 when she emphasized the importance of women having money and a place of
their own. Addressing an audience of young girls, she said, "Women have always
been poor, not for two hundred years merely, but from the beginning of time. Women
have had less intellectual freedom than the sons of Athenian slaves. Women have not
26
had a dog's chance of writing poetry. That is why I have laid so much stress on
money and a room of one's own" (Woolf 80). The importance of having one's own
money has been a recurrent theme in the writings of women in literatures across
cultures and countries. Personal wealth and the freedom to use it will eventully
methods as they can and feminism often views women's empowerment through the
lens of finances. As the women's movements grew in Britain, they inevitably made
evident in ancient and medieval writings. The rights of women were never considered
seriously as the majority was also constituted by the men-folk, and patriarchy always
processes, plays a major role in the dynamics of power equations between men and
defines patriarchy as "philosophical and social systems in which men by force, direct
pressure, ritual, tradition, law and languages, customs, etiquette, education or division
of labour determine what part woman shall play or not play, and in which the female
Several critics see the genesis of patriarchy as the major cause of man's
dominance over women because it established male control. Gradually, as it took deep
gifts. This led directly to their subordination and objectification and was concomitant
with the loss of autonomy and sexuality (Geetha 64). In the Indian context, the
V. Geetha elaborates the broader implications of the term in the following words:
"What is patriarchy? Where does the word come from? At its simplest, the term
means 'the absolute rule of the father or the eldest male member of the family' .
. . not only over all women in the family, but also over younger and socially or
not only a descriptive term that explains how specific societies construct male
authority and power, but also an analytical category critically deployed, chiefly
to impack the key constituents of authority and power in any social system,
which automatically privileges men over women and in which women can lay
claims to material, sexual and intellectual resources, only through fighting for
them. (Geetha 5)
and fawning over males as survival strategies. Since patriarchy did not recognize the
woman as an independent entity but saw her primarily as daughter, wife and mother,
the loss of a husband led women to become an object dependent on the charity of
others and sometimes even sexual exploitation. The stories of exploitation of young
widows reduced to the status of servants in the family and obliquely, to sexual objects
are several. Thus, if a woman paid careftil attention to the well-being of her husband,
fasted to appease the gods and prayed for his long life, there was a pragmatic
consideration in her actions. Virginia Woolf was scathing in her comment on the male
Women have served all these centuries as looking glasses possessing the
magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural
size. . . . For if she begins to tell the truth, the figure in the looking glass
banquets, unless he can see himself at breakfast and at dinner at least twice the
Periyar, the great Tamil reformer too held patriarchy responsible for
. until women are liberated from such marriages and fi-om men, our country cannot
By confining women to the precincts of the house and privileging the roles of
mother and wife above all, patriarchy effectively prevents other possibilities for
development and growth of women. It is 'natural' for women and girls to want to be
mothers and wives; it ordains their sacred responsibility to fulfill these roles. The duty
of man is to safeguard the woman from the dangers of the outside world and perform
the role of protector and provider while his essential domain of activity becomes the
world outside the home. Although not enough research has been done in this area,
feminists (both men and women) have steadily and dispassionately examined social
29
systems and structure, thereby critiquing them. This has helped them create a unique
our individual and social relationships and roles, beliefs and attitudes. The
(Geetha 9).
There is enough evidence to establish the fact that both male and female roles
are socially constructed and the process of construction begins soon after birth.
Inevitably, differences in the manner of bringing up a girl and a boy become evident
to the small child who begins to imbibe these subtle indications. Starting from small
things and simple do's and don'ts, as Beauvoir says, the 'construction' of the girl
admonitions, warnings start to come her way. These inscribe a certain "acceptable
code" of conduct for her which, she is told in subtle and sometimes not so indirect
ways, she must adhere to. From avoiding strenuous physical activity and loud laughter
to keeping the body covered and learning to control her temper, the little girl is
gradually initiated into a world where all her actions must fall within a prescribed
social framework.
Writing in the early part of the 20"^ century. Begum Robeya, in a remarkable
essay called "Nari-Puja," "The Worship of Women" (Sarkar 17), brilliantly exposed
the deceptions society practiced on itself by denying some of the facts that stare it in
the face regarding the actual treatment meted out to women. She ridiculed the
widespread assumption that woman has been held in high regard in traditional Hindu
and Muslim society through insistence on seclusion. Similarly, Kate Millet's Sexual
Politics (1969) makes a stinging critique on patriarchy and focuses on how the
confines her examination to literature, there is enough evidence to conclude that these
stereotyped images are carried over to films, magazines and television as well. The
amount of social conditioning that they do in influencing young boys and girls to
perceive themselves and each other in certain set ways cannot be underestimated.
women are often the ones who embody religious practices the most. One of the most
effective forms of socialization happens through religion and culture. Often, women
are the bearers of culture and faith; they actually take charge of most family rituals
and observe religious codes faithfully. Most religions perpetuate patriarchal structures
of power and are hardly progressive. This is due to the fact that although religions
claim divine revelation as their source of authority, they are in actuality historically
civilizations indicate that whenever there have been debates regarding the position of
weight against these and reinforced existing and traditional power configurations. In
the case of women and girls too, religion is used to impress upon them the necessity
The well known hypothesis that the inferior position of women in family and
society goes hand in hand with their exclusion from social the economic process is
confirmed by the Indian social history since the early times to the present day. In the
lower castes, where they take active part in the economic life, women enjoy more
freedom and more independence than in the higher castes (Gore 13), where they were
up to recent times, excluded not only from the production process, but also from the
right to property and inheritance. It is therefore no wonder that in the old sources there
Modem education and modem economic life compel the Indian women more
and more to leave the narrow sphere of the family and work side by side with men.
This breaking down of the traditional segregation of male and female domains of life
must give rise to completely new problems for women. Among the various social
evils which the reformers of the 19'*^ century attacked as degrading and unworthy of a
human being was the purdah system, which to a great extent regulates the life of
women in North India. But purdah also signifies a comprehensive system of mles,
codes of conduct, folk cultural ways, and also the principle which is the most radical
The Indian women could see a ray of hope only with the freedom movement
which brought about a decisive change in the social, political and religious status of
women. From the early 19"^ century onwards, when national consciousness began to
develop among the educated Indian elite, up to the final attainment of Independence,
the women's question was most closely connected with the political freedom stmggle
(Cousins 24) and the active participation of women in this stmggle has made
important contribution to its success. The awareness that they fought side by side with
men against an overwhelming colonial power and took part in the building up of a
new national order has since remained with the Indian middle-class women and has
In the course of the 19'*' and 20* centuries, they became more and more
involved in the political and social sphere. The stmggle for the upliftment of women
took place mainly in three major fields which included legislation, education and
politics. Efforts were made for the introduction of laws for social reform and women's
education. The political emancipation of women took place in the active phase of the
independence movement in the first decades of the 20"' century. The introduction of
32
English education in India opened the eyes of the Hindu elite (Mazumdar et al 812-
13) to the disgraceful social conditions of their own people. Educated Hindus began to
view the practice of killing female children the practice of Sati (burning alive of
degradation of the woman in Hindu society as shameful practices. One of the first
fighters for the cause of women was the social reformer and nationalist Raja
Rammhan Roy, who in 1828 founded the Hindu reform movement, the Brahmo
Samaj. It fought for the emancipation of the woman against the old "social evils" like
sati (Mazumdar et al 812-13). Also other religious and social reform movements
which came up in connection with the Hindu revival like the Arya Samaj, the
Ramkrishna Mission and the Theosophical Society, contributed to the women's cause
and advocated reforms and women's education despite ideological differences (ibid.
878-82). Vina Mazumdar points out that more radical social reformers like
Vidyasagar, Jyotiba Phooley and Lokhitavadi Gopal Hari Deshmukh fought for the
amelioration of the lot of women. Phooley, above all, saw a close connection between
exposed the patriarchal bias in the Ramayana by pointing out that Sita, though proven
Interestingly, the patriarchal attitude made sure that the women's movement
did not go beyond the basic structures of family and caste system. Nowhere have the
leading women of this epoch tried to transcend the area of political and theoretical
activity which had been carved out for them by men. This area is by and large
circumscribed by their family. Therefore, Vina Mazumdar rightly points out that the
reformers hardly cared about liberating women from age old bonds; they were rather
concerned about "the women's roles within the family as wives, daughters and
33
mothers" (63). To draw women into the political struggle is a tactical necessity of any
such a movement whether the patriarchal family is protected as the basic social unit or
not. The fact that women themselves accepted their limited tactical function within
the independence movement made them excellent instruments in the struggle for
freedom. But they did not work out a strategy for their own liberation, or struggle for
their own interests. Even today, the ideal of womanhood is widely accepted and
appreciated by the so called educated middle class. Ironically, women never reaped
individuals. They remained weak because they were projected as weak characters by
the male writers in their writings. Consequently, they felt it rather strongly that they
have to take the initiative themselves and work towards creating woman's identity in
literature. It is genuinely felt that women writers from across the globe have created a
niche for themselves in the recent years, which seems to be the perfect way to resist
patriarchy.
The themes and concerns of women writers have changed over the years. For
instance, in the 1950's, critics-both men and women-felt that women wrote only
spectrum of themes and exploring social and political issues. Though they were more
open to exploring the 'dark' side of life, many still felt hesitant in dealing with
Women writers of the last quarter of the twentieth century have come a long
way and the writers like Carol Ann Daffy, Dorris Lessing and African American
writers like Tony Morrison and Alice walker among others have dominated the
34
literary scene. In postmodern and postcolonial literature, images of women have been
concerns itself with the search for identity alone. Increasingly, women's literature has
the existent myth of male standards. Adrienne Rich, the feminist writer observes that
"for women writers in particular, there is the challenge and promise of a whole new
The Women's Liberation Movement of the late 1960s in the First World
empowered women with self-confidence as never before. Women writers like Kate
Millet, Erica Jong, Diane Johnson and Marilyn French interrogated and rejected
Fuller, Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Plath, Doris Lessing and Simone Beauvoir among
others registered their sense of outrage against attitudes towards women in their texts
in no uncertain terms.
Feminist writing is not merely by women but for women as well. Ecriture
feminine, as defined by the French feminist writer, Helene Cixous relates to writing
by women which is typically feminine in theme, style and approach, steering clear of
and communality between women irrespective of race and colour. This is realized
writers, free from the influences of phallocratic, bourgeois ideologies and male power
structures.
thought and expression. Helen Cixous states in her seminal essay, "The Laugh of
35
Medusa:" "By vvriting herself, woman will return to the body which has been more
than confiscated from her and has been turned into the uncanny stranger on display -
the ailing or dead figure. . . . Write yourself your body must be heard" (qtd in Bigsby,
courage to speak out in their true voices of power regarding self and the other.
regarded as an appropriate and significant call for women's writing since the
seventies. The impact of the movement can be perceived from the serious emphasis
on the re-conceptualizing of the role of women and their gradual inclusion in the
about the false separation of public and private spheres, emphasis on the fact that the
individuals and not property and labour dependent upon patriarchy. In the past two
and a half decades, literature in general and fiction in particular has reflected the
of feminism has meant that women no longer have to see motherhood, heterosexuality
and marriage as the only possible lifestyle and myths portraying women's happiness
as being confined within these parameters have now been exploded." (Richardson
322)
The new woman has come into being because of the impact of feminism
which implies the assertion of human rights by women who have dismantled the myth
propagated by patriarchy that women are weak, docile, dependent, subservient and
demure and that they require protection by men. The roots of feminism lie in the
distant past when woman was regarded inferior to man both physically and
36
intellectually. She was rated somewhere between man and child. The assertion of
rights by women dates back to 15"^ century and Christine De Pilan of France is
regarded as 'the first modem woman'. Present day feminism is rooted in French
Mary Wollstonecraft (1750-1797) and J.S. Mill (1806-1875) were the early crusaders
for the emancipation of women. Struggle for equal rights attained new heights with
(1792). It proved to be the first major feminist manifesto which influenced thinking
men and women both in the U.S. and U.K. It anticipated all the major demands of
women's movement i.e., education, legal representation, the right to vote, the right to
property and admission to professions. She argued that women were endowed with
reason and man's superiority over woman was not justified and hence subjection of
J.S. Mill, one of the first eloquent spokesmen of the rights of women, came
out with his essay "The Subjection of Women" (1869). This was the first suffrage
petition presented to the Parliament where he pleaded for women's rights. This essay,
all over the world. Mill argued that subjection of women; legal and social was
indefensible. He demanded full equality for women so that society could be made
women supplied a great deal of courage to women and they started resisting
patriarchy through their literary endeavors. As literature is the image of society, the
women refuse to be passive, docile and self-annihilating creatures. They are out to
37
subvert the patriarchal norms to reject marginal position and come to centre stage. It
is based on the assumption that gender is not a given sex. It is a construct, a historical
men viewed them and since 'feminity' is always associated by men with passivity.
The male literary tradition presents women as victims and as helpless beings.
develop faith and their own power and potential refusing subordination, deprivation,
marginalization and victimization. They aspire for subject position and establish their
ovm individuality and identity and prepare men to treat women as complementary.
This type of literature got under way with Virginia Woolf s A Room of One's
Own (1928) and Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex (1949). In A Room of One's
Own, Woolf brings forth the reasons behind the conspicuous absence of women from
prophet of feminism created ripples with the publication of The Second Sex (1949).
She strongly criticized and rejected the mainstream thought where man is the norm
and woman is defined negatively in relation to that norm. "He is the 'subject' the
During late 1960's, the feminist movement got impetus from the works of
Betty Friedan and Kate Millet. Betty Friedan, through her Feminist Mystique (1963)
suggested women to shed the image created for both by men. She asserted that
women should come out of the private world of domesticity into the public world.
Culturally and politically, public sphere dominates and hence men dominate women.
Kate Millet's Sexual Politics (1970) drove home how foundational and manipulative
38
the image of woman actually was. Millet held literature as mirror in which this image
making was reflected. Further manifestation of this view came in Patricia Spack's The
Female Imagination (1975), Ellen Moers' Literary Women (1976), Elaine Showalter's
A Literature of their Own (1977) and Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar's The Mad
feminist, sex and gender require elaboration. As 'female is related to biology, so all
women are undoubtedly females but every female need not be feminine. In the same
way, it is not necessary that all females are feminists. Having the same body does not
necessarily make them one political group. Toril Moi makes a clear distinction in the
meaning of these terms in her essay 'Feminist literary criticism. "Female is a matter
traits. It refers to the patterns of sexuality and behavior imposed by cultural and social
political label, indicating support for the aims of new woman's movement which
emerged in late 1960's. Accordingly, a feminist is one who advocates equality for
believe that they are natural. Patriarchal oppression consists in imposing certain social
standards of femininity on all biological women and one who refuses to conform to
makes women believe that there is such a thing as an essence of femaleness called
humility etc.
39
Sex and gender are the two sides of a same coin. Gender is not a given but a
place through the working of ideology. Male and female are the categories according
to sex while those according to gender are masculine and feminine: "One is not bom
but rather becomes a woman. It is civilization as a whole that produces this creature"
(Beauvoir IX).
submissive domesticity. Gender defined roles serve male need for domination. This is
what Kate Millet calls sexual politics. Patriarchy provides congenial environment for
feminine qualities, women also see themselves in the image created for them and the
myth of masculinity does not let them enjoy equality and fi-eedom. Rather, it silences
and marginalizes them and makes them believe that femininity is inherently linked
The terms 'female,' 'feminine' and 'feminist' also apply to literature. "Female
refers to the writing by women. This label does not say anything at all about the
nature of writing. Feminine stands for the writing which seems to be marginalized by
anti-sexist position" (Moi 220). As all females need not be feminists, in the same way,
all female writing need not be feminist. The attitude of the author towards the gender
defined roles is the basic criteria to decide feminine text. Women must occupy central
position in it.
40
the sixties. It responds to the way woman is presented in literature. Feminist criticism
probably began when the woman became aware of her relationship to language and
Showalter divides feminist criticism into Feminist critique and Gynocriticism. It has
two basic premises: women presented in literature by male writers from their own
point of view i.e. Phallocentricism while women presented in the writings of female
writings. The very act of dealing with the woman writer is a feminist one. In Feminist
Critique, woman is the reader of male authored texts and interprets it from women's
In the writings by men, women are presented from men's point of view and
therefore lack authenticity. Through feminist critique, women re-write and re-create
the male created text from feminist perspective. Jonathan Culler defines "Feminist
Criticism" as a political act whose aim is not simply to interpret the world but to
change it by changing the consciousness of those who read and their relation to what
they read" (Culler 67). Feminist literary criticism is a combination of feminism and
the literary theories. Feminists in the women's movements fight for social and
political change that would liberate them from patriarchal oppression. There are
literary criticism does not privilege any one school of thought over the other. All of
struggle against patriarchy and sexism is not just a concern for gender in literature, the
task of feminist critics or theorists is to expose the way in which male dominance over
41
females constitutes perhaps the most pervasive ideology of our culture, and provides
its most fundamental concepts of power. Given the all pervasive nature of patriarchal
power, feminists have to be pluralistic. All kinds of feminisms and feminist theories
probe into the causes of women's oppression and try to find remedies.
Feminist movement though originated and developed in the west, but its
presence can be felt as well as seen across the globe and in India. It has generated
awareness amongst women about their rights. Echoes of feminism are visible in
Indian writings in English and consequently women have started resisting patriarchy
through their writings. By depicting the status of women in family as well as society
and raising voice against their age old exploitation by the patriarchal society, the
Indian women's writing has emerged powerfully. Eminent Indian women writers like
Kamala Das, Anita Desai, Kamala Markandaya, Ruth Prawar Jhabwala, Nayantara
Sahgal, Shashi Deshpande, Bharati Mukharjee, Rama Mehta, Manju Kapur, Shobha
De, to a name a few, have given full expression to the problems faced by women.
Now, women are in a position to express their own experiences and feelings. They are
both the subjects and objects of study. Literature is not just a mirror of the society for
these writers as it reflects, guides and shapes the relationships for the balanced growth
popularity, both in India and abroad. It has carved a permanent and sure niche for
itself in world literature. From a sapling, it has grown into a huge tree. In the
beginning, its position had never been clearly grasped because the critics who set the
standards and perspectives in European literature were not closely acquainted with
non-European cultures and the vital elements of its philosophy. It is with the spread of
culture that a great deal of interest has been generated in the Indo-English and other
42
commonwealth literatures. The writers, readers, scholars and even critics have started
realizing that the literature written in Australia, New Zealand, West Indies, South
Africa, Canada, Nigeria and India is in no way inferior and the writers from these
countries have contributed significantly to the modem English literature. They have
won prestigious prizes in the field of literature, which speaks volumes about its
significance and authenticity. In the present scenario, fiction is considered the most
and ideas in the context of the contemporary times. It gives a peep into the modem
civilization. The creative Indian English writers have been attracted to the genre and
adopted this form generously and skilfully. Therefore, the most remarkable
contribution of Indian English writing can easily be traced in the genre of fiction.
The maiden Indo-English novel was written by B. C. Chatterjee, who left his
first-ever attempt incomplete and preferred to switch over to Bengali, his mother
tongue. The fact remains that he was the first modem novelist of India and
Chatterjee's Rajmohan's Wife paved the way for Anand Math (1884), India's first
political novel. In the nineteenth and early twentieth century, only historical romances
were added in the world of fiction i.e. S.K. Nihambe's Ratanabai (1885) S.K.
Ghosh's The Prince of Destiny (1909), S.K. Mitra's Hindupur (1909) and R.C. Dutt's
The Slave Girl of Ara (1909). But these historical romances could not gain the
desired momentum. Nevertheless, the seeds were sown which started sprouting
between the two World Wars and rich harvest was reaped in the form of Mulk Raj
William Walsh comments: "It was in 1930's that the Indians began what has now
43
turned out to be their very substantial contribution to the novel in English and one
pace, and gained momentum only during the last decades. The international critical
standards with standardized and defined parameters placed it in the aesthetic tradition
when it won the coveted Booker for the year 1981. In 1985, Nayantara Sehgal was
awarded the Sinclair prize for her novel, Rich Like Us. For her work. The Middle Man
and Other Stories, Bharati Mukherjee was also awarded The National Book Critics
Circle Award for 1988. Arunaditi Roy also won the prestigious Booker Prize for her
novel, The God of Small Things in 2000 which has flirther given boost to the Indian
English novel. Gradually, this genre became a popular platform for the literary
expression. Novelists like Anita Desai, Nayantara Sahgal, Shashi Deshpande, Shashi
Tharoor, Amitabh Ghosh, Vikram Seth, Manju Kapoor and many others appeared on
the scene after the 1980's. They dealt with burning issues like colonialism,
globalization, immigration, feminism, patriarchy, love, marriage and sex through their
fiction. Khushwant Singh has aptly pointed out that "The writers writing in English
have put India on the literary map of the world" (Singh 3).
The present thesis proposes to analyse the selected works of the contemporary
Indian English novelists. Out of the three novelists whose works are being critically
analysed in the present thesis, Rama Mehta stands out as least appreciated. Barring
few insightftil articles that have been written on her novel, Inside the Haveli, there is
nothing written about her that may command serious critical attention. One such
perceptive article figures in Malashri Lai's The Law of the Threshold. It presents a
well argued critical discourse on gender and class as depicted in Rama Mehta's novel.
44
To quote Malashri Lai: "To situate herself 'inside' the haveli, literally in the
women who led secluded lives, she had to devise a novel which turned out part
sociology, part a masking of autobiography."(Lai 83) Besides Lai also works out
as a woman living in urban setting and nurturing as the one who has progressive
views about the world outside the haveli entrapment. Geeta's mediation between old
and new values has been convincingly underscored by Lai (Lai 81-103).
Vrinda Nabar in her article on, 'A kind of safety': The Rationalisation of
Purdah in Rama Mehta's Inside the Haveli dwells on issues such as gender
Misra also throws light, "On the portals of change" in her analysis of Purdah culture
in this novel (Mishra 71). Another critic namely Kamal Bhasin also discusses
"acculturation" in Rama Mehta's novel. Bhasin does this by tracing the female
is a symbol of old traditions and values" (Bhasin 114). Usha Bande too, in her book
Writing Resistance, touches upon the issue of female resistance by observing that
"Rama Mehta creates a world of female understanding that stands in good stead to
From the above critical survey it becomes evident that Rama Mehta's Inside
the Haveli has not been critiqued from the view point of patriarchal resistance.
Malashri Lai does take up the issue of gender and class but an exclusive thrust on
womanhood.' Moreover, the applicability of the concept of the new woman has
neither been attempted nor envisioned by any critic so far. As such, in the present
study, the novel has been taken up for elaborate critical analysis from the view point
of patriarchal resistance as well as the concept of the new woman whose characteristic
traits have been amply depicted through the portrayal of Geeta in Rama Mehta's
problems of alienation and adjustment. She makes all her protagonists come to terms
with their dilemmas and conflicts and reach an understanding of themselves as well as
the world around them without any help from outside. Through these efforts they
emerge as new women who resist the patriarchal barriers and prove themselves as
Deshpande also deals with the new consciousness that her protagonists are
able to acquire in rapidly changing scenario of the modem women world. S. Prasanna
Sree has also done a fiill length study of her novels in her book Women in the Novels
tradition and modernity. She also minutely examines as to how they cope with the
emerging situations in their lives thereby preparing to deal with society in a non-
human spaces: the writings of Shashi Deshpande (2003) is very powerful as she has
done a close reading of her fiction to interrogate strengths and limits of the 'feminist'
46
woman's struggle to define herself in the patriarchal set up and attain an autonomous
self-hood as observed by scholars like Bhatnagar, Alka Saxena, T. Ashok Rani and
Anita Singh in women in The Novels of Shashi Deshpande (2001), edited by Suman
Bala. T. Ashoka Rani talks about the problems of Shashi Deshpande's middle class
career women such as "Indu, Saru and Jaya [who] succeed in constructing a self
with themselves by redefining their relationships, accepting at the same time social
constraints and emerge as new women doing justice in their domestic as well as,
professional fields" (Rani 32). Another aspect that has been repeatedly examined in
Deshpande's novels is the problem faced by the career women in the Indian society.
Premila Paul shows in her study of The Dark Holds No Terrors as to how Deshpande
"explodes the myth of man's unquestionable superiority and the myth of woman
being a martyr and a paragon of all virtues" (Paul 30). Nalinabh Tripathi also
evaluates The Dark Holds No Terrors as the projection of "the post modern dilemma
of a woman who strongly resents the onslaught on her individuality and identity"
(Tripathi 43). R.K. Sharma studies That Long Silence as the protagonists' journey
From the forgoing critical survey , it becomes evident that there is a vast
several scholars and critics, such as status of women in Indian society, its feminist
tradition and modernity, and native and western cultures, etc. Much has been written
about varied thematic dimensions of Shashi Deshpande's novels, but no full length
47
Study has so far been undertaken about the emerging new woman who musters
Unlike Shashi Deshpande, Manju Kapur has not been been examined critically
as there are only few critical articles dealing with diverse thematic strands in her
Kapur's A Married Woman (Dhawan 172-176) Pushp Lata negotiates the image of
article has negligible magnitude. Therefore, the present thesis proposes to take it up at
greater length. Pushpa Mohandas's article explores the concept of selfhood in Kapur's
A Married Woman. Interestingly, it touches, even though marginally, the core concept
of the new woman as Mohandas aptly observes, "Kapur portrays a woman who has
become aware of the biased attitude of her husband and stands for the modem
Seema Malik in her brief write up, "Crossing Patriarchal Threshold: Glimpses
of the Incipient New Woman in Manju Kapur's Diffiicult Daughters" deals with the
concept of new woman and its feminist implications in the portrayal of Kapur's
discourse not because she is a woman writing about women but because she has
visible and invisible contexts. She presents feminism at its most sane, keeping in mind
48
the Indian context." (Dhawan 137). Bhagabat Nayak's article lends thematic thrust on
dichotomy" in the novel based on the moral responsibility "between a spinster and a
married bachelor" (Naikar 156-157). Thus we see that barring single article by Seema
Malik, there is scarcely any criticism available on the notion of the new woman as
represented in Manju Kapur's novels under study. As such, it becomes evident that
the motif of patriarchal resistance and the concept of the new woman have not been
As such, the focus of the present study is to show the emergence of the new
woman in select fiction of Rama Mehta, Shashi Deshpande and Manju Kapoor via
demonstrating as to how she resists patriarchy. It seeks to prove how and to what
extent the novelists through their women characters have been able to portray the
image of the new woman. The new woman is the one who has come of age, who has a
status that is not subservient to patriarchal norms, who is watchful and aware of the
environment she lives in and who has the capacity to live life on her own terms in a
male-dominated society. The study also includes the social analysis of the patriarchal
set-up as reflected in the novels of these women novelists. The study also deals with
the psychological growth of the new woman who resists dominance of patriarchy and
tries to open the doors which have been closed for her for centuries. The thesis also
involves an intensive study of the selected novels of Manju Kapur, Rama Mehta and
woman has come to occupy a prominent space in the Indian English fiction.
The thesis has been divided into three chapters. In chapter 1, which is
"Introduction," an attempt has been made to discuss the concept of patriarchy from
the historical and theoretical perspective. The feminist theory has also been discussed
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at length to foreground the concept of the new woman which is germane to the
present study and has been explored at length. Chapter 2 entitled ''Inside the Haveli:
From Margin to Centre" deals with Geeta, the female protagonist in Rama Mehta's
Inside the Haveli, who breaks the patriarchal cage open and manages to move to the
centre from the margin. The protagonist emerges as the new woman as she fights the
battle of her life and wins it by using the weapon of education. Chapter 3, "Crossing
The Patriarchal Threshold" deals with the protagonists of Shashi Deshpande namely
Saru in The Dark Holds No Terrors and Jaya in That Long Silence who refuse to be
the victims of social oppression by the age old patriarchal society. They resist and
question the role assigned to them as daughters, sisters, wives and mothers and reftise
to be mute witnesses in the face of oppressive patriarchal system, and emerge as new
women resisting these norms relentlessly. Likewise, Chapter 4 has been titled as
"Exploring New Vistas" and it deals with the protagonists (Virmati in Difficult
Daughters and Astha in A Married Woman) of Manju Kapur who refuse to be puppets
space and stage a formal walk out to explore new world around them as new women.
This chapter will be followed by chapter 5, "Conclusion" which will sum up the entire
as the following chapters thereby enlarging scope of further research particularly from