Wives, Widows, and Concubines: The Conjugal Family Ideal in Colonial India

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Indiana University Press, 2008 - Families - 169 pages

The family was at the center of intense debates about identity, community, and nation in colonial Tamil Nadu, India. Emerging ideas about love, marriage, and desire were linked to caste politics, the colonial economy, and nationalist agitation. In the first detailed historical study of Tamil families in colonial India, Wives, Widows, and Concubines maps changes in the late colonial family in relation to the region's culture, politics, and economy. Among professional and mercantile elites, the conjugal relationship displaced the extended family as the focal point of household dynamics. Conjugality provided a language with which women laid claim to new rights, even as the structures of the conjugal family reinscribed women's oppression inside and outside marriage.

Published in association with the American Institute of Indian Studies.

 

Contents

Situating Families
1
Kinship Household and State
18
Defining Womens Rights to Family Property
45
Indian and Dravidian Politics of Conjugality
67
Emotion and Desire in Womens Print Culture
94
Families and History
120
Notes
129
Bibliography
153
Index
163
Copyright

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About the author (2008)

Mytheli Sreenivas is Assistant Professor of History and Women's Studies at The Ohio State University.

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