000 01958cam a22001817a 4500
001 13213724
010 _a 2003306286
020 _a0195659155
082 _aIn820.99287
_bWOM
245 0 0 _aWomen's voices: selections from nineteenth and early-twentieth century Indian writing in English
260 _aNew Delhi
_bOxford University Press
_c2002
300 _axxii,451p.
500 _aIntroduction by De Souza, Eunice Biographical notes by Pereira, Lindsay
520 _aIn this anthology Eunice de Souza brings together the writings of women whose contributions in various areas - social and literary - during the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries were of much significance. A collection of excerpts from letters, tracts, diaries, magazines, articles, autobiographies, biographies, short stories, and even speeches, this anthology once again brings to the forefront voices that have faded over a period of time, and works that are almost impossible to find. The women writers included here address a wide range of issues, some of which were specific to their times but most of which are of relevance even today - from theatre, dance, and travel to the position of women in society, education for women, child marriage, orthodox practices such as the purdah; and most importantly, the issue of franchise of women. In the context of the nineteenth century, some of these issues are particularly important because this was a time when the demand for social reform in relation to women was beginning to acquire a political dimension in many ways, and was being perceived, finally, as part of a larger nationalist problem. This anthology includes writings by Cornelia Sorbaji, Toru Dutt, Iqbalunnisa Hussain, Sarojini Naidu, Zeenuth Futehally and Santha Rama Rau: - Putting these works together will lead to some reassessments in the history of Indian writings in English.
650 0 _aIndic literature (English)
650 0 _aWomen
942 _cBK
999 _c61481
_d61481