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Women and the Romance of the Word: 19th Century Contexts in Bengal
Barnes and Noble
Women and the Romance of the Word: 19th Century Contexts in Bengal
Current price: $115.00
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Barnes and Noble
Women and the Romance of the Word: 19th Century Contexts in Bengal
Current price: $115.00
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Around the middle of the 19th century, woman emerges as a new sign disrupting the cultural economy of Bengal and reversing and realigning conventional notions and expectations of woman's agency and power. The colonial interface would have been important because a need for women's overall development was felt amongst the male intelligentsia of the period and some of the key texts that circulated at the beginning of the 19th century were Mary Wollstonecraft's
Vindication of the Rights of Woman
(1792), Thomas Paine's
Rights of Man
(1791), James Mill's
History of British India
(1817), Richard Carlile's
Every Woman's Book
(1826) and William
Thompson's
Appeal of One Half the Human Race, Women, against the
Pretensions of the Other Half, Men
(1825). The inaugural moment of this outstanding efflorescence of women's writing in polemics, travel writing,
autobiography and jourbanal articles could be said to begin with Kailashbasini Devi's
Hindu Mahilaganer Heenabastha
(
The Woeful Plight of Hindu Women
, 1863), in autobiographies like Rassundari Devi's
Amar Jiban
My Life
, 1876) and Binodini Dasi's
Amar Katha
My Words
, 1913) and in personalised travelogues like Krishnabhabini Das's
Englande Banga Mahila
A Bengali
Woman in England
, 1885). As Kailashbasini, Rassundari, Krishnabhabini and Binodini write, the romance of the word, the romance of learning and self-realisation is enacted. A new dramatic script emerges as Bengali women become the scriptwriters of their own histories.
Vindication of the Rights of Woman
(1792), Thomas Paine's
Rights of Man
(1791), James Mill's
History of British India
(1817), Richard Carlile's
Every Woman's Book
(1826) and William
Thompson's
Appeal of One Half the Human Race, Women, against the
Pretensions of the Other Half, Men
(1825). The inaugural moment of this outstanding efflorescence of women's writing in polemics, travel writing,
autobiography and jourbanal articles could be said to begin with Kailashbasini Devi's
Hindu Mahilaganer Heenabastha
(
The Woeful Plight of Hindu Women
, 1863), in autobiographies like Rassundari Devi's
Amar Jiban
My Life
, 1876) and Binodini Dasi's
Amar Katha
My Words
, 1913) and in personalised travelogues like Krishnabhabini Das's
Englande Banga Mahila
A Bengali
Woman in England
, 1885). As Kailashbasini, Rassundari, Krishnabhabini and Binodini write, the romance of the word, the romance of learning and self-realisation is enacted. A new dramatic script emerges as Bengali women become the scriptwriters of their own histories.