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Saogat and the Reformed Bengali Muslim WomanSarmistha Dutta Gupta is Research Collaborator, Institute of Development Studies Kolkata (IDSK). This essay is part of her current work on Identities and Histories: Politics and Womens Writings in Bengal. An earlier draft of the paper was presented at the School of Womens Studies, Jadavpur University, in April 2006. E-mail: sarmistha91{at}yahoo.com. This article explores the interface of politics and womens writing in late colonial Bengal and traces the trajectory of identity formation of middle-class Bengali Muslim women through a reading of the history of Saogat—founded in 1918, the liberal reformist periodical acclaimed to have mentored some of the best-known women writers of Muslim Bengal. Taking into account some of the changes in the political climate of Bengal from the 1920s to the 1940s, the paper researches the influence of politics on the changing course of Saogat and the moving of womens voices to a separate domain—the womens weekly, Begum, established a few weeks before the partition of India in 1947. In doing so, it recognises the plurality in elite womens writing in Bengal in this period and shows how the shifting grounds of a periodical in relation to categories of identity like religion and state politics, shapes womens writing produced therein.
Indian Journal of Gender Studies, Vol. 16, No. 3,
329-358 (2009) |
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