Re-Imagining Sociology in India: Feminist Perspectives

Author:   Gita Chadha ,  M. T. Joseph
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367734497


Pages:   348
Publication Date:   18 December 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Re-Imagining Sociology in India: Feminist Perspectives


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Author:   Gita Chadha ,  M. T. Joseph
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge India
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9780367734497


ISBN 10:   0367734494
Pages:   348
Publication Date:   18 December 2020
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

List of Contributors. Acknowledgements. Introduction: Mapping and marking feminist sociologies in India Part I Reading and Writing Early Women in Sociology 1. Early women sociologists in India 2. Reclaiming Neera Desai’s sociological legacy: Women’s movements, struggles and organizations 3. The sociology of C. Parvathamma: Going beyond stereotypes 4. Ratna Naidu: An intellectual biography Part II Pedagogies and Mentoring: Living Processes 5. Sociology, feminism and mentoring: Contested sites of knowledge production and consumption 6. Transforming the sociology classroom: Implementing a critical feminist pedagogy 7. Finding feminism(s): Through life in general and academics in particular Part III Substantive Transformations: Erasures, Intersections, Insertions 8. Interrogating (non) consent in sexual intimacies and infringements: Mapping the socio-legal landscape in India 9. Desire, Violence and ‘Pink Money’: Life of Kothis in a Small City of Western India 10. Organizing rule through an imagiary of the ‘masculine’: A case of the ‘martial’ Marathas 11. Interrogating the sociology of environment in western India: A gendered understanding 12. Gender, mental illness and the everyday: Understanding the interface of psychiatry with the lives of women diagnosed as mentally ill 13. Narratives in feminist sociology of science: Contextualizing the experience(s) of women scientists in India. Index

Reviews

This book in honor of Kamala Ganesh is an excellent collection of thought provoking and deeply moving scholarly essays that simultaneously celebrates Indian feminist sociologists while providing us with a much needed historical, theoretical, pedagogical and methodological understanding of the intersections of feminisms and sociologies in India. A must-read for all those across the globe who want a deep, critical and nuanced contextual understanding of the multiple challenges, contestations, contributions and successes, that shape gender, feminism and sociology in India. These essays remind us that patriarchy, latent and manifest, is deeply entrenched in the gendered and intersectional hierarchies within departments, institutions and disciplines. It also successfully shows the possibilities from individual and collective feminist struggles to break barriers, erase borders, forge paths and innovatively re-imagine sociologies in India for social transformation. The editors, Gita Chadha and M. T. Joseph, together with the contributing authors of this volume, skilfully illustrate the importance of courage and conviction, of speaking out against injustices, of taking a stand and of why and when the personal is political. Through Indian feminist sociological research, pedagogy and practices, we see how the doing of sociology shifts the terrains of sociology(s) and feminisms(s) to be more diverse, equal and inclusive. Margaret Abraham, Professor of Sociology, Hofstra University, New York, USA, and President, International Sociological Association (ISA) A first-of-its-kind interrogation of the still unfulfilled potential of feminism in Indian sociology, this volume seeks to bring feminism(s) from the margins into the disciplinary mainstream. It also poses, and seeks to answer, the awkward question of why this has so far failed to happen. An important aspect of this interrogation is the reconsideration of the careers of pioneer women sociologists, some of whom have explicitly identified with feminism or the Women's Movement, while others were just 'women doing sociology' in their own way, building on their gendered life-experiences. A second facet is feminist pedagogy, into which is introduced consideration of the critical role of feminist 'mentoring'. The volume also takes us into relatively new territories - of mental illness, science, the environment, sexuality, masculinity, and the law - asking what feminist perspectives can contribute to these relatively new domains of sociological knowledge. Altogether, this unique volume of essays is both a fitting tribute to the outstanding feminist legacy of the late Sharmila Rege and an utterly appropriate felicitation of Kamala Ganesh, one of India's foremost feminist sociologists. Patricia Uberoi, former Professor of Sociology, Institute of Economic Growth, New Delhi, India


Author Information

Gita Chadha is Assistant Professor at the Department of Sociology, University of Mumbai, India. Her areas of academic interest include sociological theory, feminist science studies, sociology of knowledge, intersectional feminist epistemologies and visual cultures. She has designed and taught the first feminist science studies course in India at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai. She has developed frameworks for feminist archiving at the Research Centre for Women’s Studies, SNDT Women’s University, and has designed interdisciplinary pedagogic initiatives for integrating science and social science teaching. M. T. Joseph is Assistant Professor at the Department of Sociology, University of Mumbai, India. His fields of interest include sociology of religion, critical religious studies, cultural anthropology, political sociology, postcolonial studies, Dalit studies and masculinities. He is also a member of the faculty at the Institute of Indian Culture, Mumbai, a postgraduate research centre in sociology and anthropology recognized by the University of Mumbai. He is connected to the tradition of anthropological research pioneered by Wilhelm Schmidt.

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