Defining Modernity through Education: Women’s Responses from Colonial Punjab

Authors

  • Arti Minocha Associate Professor, Department of English, Lady Shri Ram College, University of Delhi, India. Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48165/sajssh.2022.3502%20

Keywords:

colonial Punjab, women’s education, women’s periodical press, reform movements in Punjab, print cultures in Punjab

Abstract

Late-19th and early-20th centuries in Punjab were times of ferment and formation of new class,  caste, gender, and religious identities. The quest for a localized modernity at this historical  juncture was spear-headed by reform movements of Arya Samaj, Singh Sabha, and Ahmaddiya  reform movement, that predicated their quest on the construction of ‘modern womanhood’.  The new technology of print was used effectively by reform patriarchies to disseminate these  representations of modern womanhood. While much has been written about these patriarchal  reform movements that projected their own modernity through ‘liberal improvements’ in the  condition of their women and by opening up to ideas of education and companionate marriages,  the presence of women in this history has been elided over. This essay examines the print  spheres in late-19th and early-20th century Punjab, especially the periodical press, to trace  women’s responses to reform prescriptions about their education and deportment. It is in this  interplay between dominant discursive formations and alternative modes of articulation by  women that multiple cultural meanings emerge. 

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Published

2022-10-06