Intimate Relations takes a  close look at the domestic novel as a literary genre and a tool for social  reform. Originating from the intersection of literary and social reform  movements, in the late nineteenth century the domestic novel led to literary  innovation and to a rethinking of women’s roles in society and politics. 
  Krupa  Shandilya focuses primarily on social reform movements that changed intimate  relations between men and women in Hindu and Muslim society, namely the widow  remarriage act in Bengal (1856) and the education of women promoted by the  Aligarh movement (1858–1900). 
  Both  movements sought to recover the woman as a “respectable” subject for the Hindu  and Muslim nation, where respectability meant an asexual spirituality. While  most Indian literary scholarship has focused on the normative Hindu woman, Intimate Relations links the  representation of the widow in bhadralok society with that of the courtesan of sharif society in Bengali and Urdu novels from the 1880s to the 1920s. By studying  their disparate histories in the context of social reform movements, Shandilya  highlights the similarities of Hindu and Islamic constructions of the gendered  nation.
  This book will be of interest  to students and scholars of Indian history, politics and literature, as well as  women’s and gender studies.