The Unsafe Sex
The Female Binary and Public Violence against Women
Price: 695.00
ISBN:
9780199463107
Hardback
200 pages
Price: 695.00
ISBN:
9780199463107
Hardback
200 pages
Nalini Natarajan
Not too long ago, India woke up to the heart-rending horror of the ‘Nirbhaya’ rape case. While the brutal violence against the victim sent shockwaves throughout the country, the rapists (as well as other men on the streets) caused further moral outrage by blaming the victim for being out at night and holding her responsible for her rape. What does this signify? Is there an ongoing visceral war waged by men against women? The Unsafe Sex addresses this phenomenon and provides a socio-historical and cultural context to explain why public violence against women is rooted in the binary within which they are viewed—women as, ideally, a source of dignity within the home, while being a source of shame outside it. Probing the intensification of this war on women’s bodies, it delves into issues about their safety and security in an increasingly unpredictable world. Drawing from anthropology, myths, literature and film, history, sociology of class and change, and feminist theory, this book explores the reasons underlying a glaring fissure in our public life––cruelty towards women in public places.
Rights: World Rights
Nalini Natarajan
Table of contents
Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Sita Apaharan and Draupadi Vastraharan: Abduction and Disrobing in the Epics 2. Militarization and Mutiny: Safety and Sexuality for Peasant Women and Prostitutes 3. Gandhi and the ‘Purity’ of Assaulted Women 4. Westernization and Latent Gender Violence 5. From National Symbol to Victim of a New ‘Freedom’: Bombay Cinema and Violence 6. Cut Down by the Cutlass: Violence against Women in Indenture Epilogue Glossary Bibliography Index About the Author
Nalini Natarajan
Features
- Study on violence against women in-urban, rural, and literary spaces-India
- Draws from anthropology, myths, literature and film, history, sociology, and feminist theory
- Valuable reference work for students of literature, gender studies, and sociology
Nalini Natarajan
Table of contents
Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Sita Apaharan and Draupadi Vastraharan: Abduction and Disrobing in the Epics 2. Militarization and Mutiny: Safety and Sexuality for Peasant Women and Prostitutes 3. Gandhi and the ‘Purity’ of Assaulted Women 4. Westernization and Latent Gender Violence 5. From National Symbol to Victim of a New ‘Freedom’: Bombay Cinema and Violence 6. Cut Down by the Cutlass: Violence against Women in Indenture Epilogue Glossary Bibliography Index About the Author
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