Power is the key element of  patriarchy; and the other significant element is love. Traditional control over  women’s sexuality was rearticulated in the mid-nineteenth century through the  ideology of a non-consensual, non-dissoluble conjugality, based on the wife’s  unconditional fidelity and loyalty to her husband. Intertwined with this  control was the fear that women would transgress, fears that even led to a  backlash against representations of women’s deviant love in novels, and  attempts to prevent women from reading. Despite these restrictions, some women  did follow their desires, in defiance of social norms.
  Desire and Defiance retells story of heterosexual love in Bengal from the woman’s  perspective. Focusing primarily on upper-caste Bengali women from both Hindu  and Brahmo backgrounds, this book explores aspects of heterosexual intimacy  that were considered transgressive by upper-caste Hindu society. Resisting  societal attempts to confine their sexuality, many upper-caste Hindu and Brahmo  women married (or remarried) according to their own choice, or engaged in  non-marital and extra-marital intimacy. However, as the book shows, such  transgression usually led to harassment, familial and social ostracism, and  severe social sanctions. The colonial bureaucracy, judiciary and media  exercised control over women’s sexuality through laws and strictures,  highlighting the way patriarchy transcended the divide between the public and  the private, the coloniser and the colonised.
  Providing a feminist  understanding of the high-caste Hindu/Brahmo woman’s varied and mostly  unrewarding experiences of intimacy outside the bounds of normative  relationships, this book provides a glimpse into the deeply gendered world of  love. Interesting and informative, this book will be useful to students and  scholars of women’s studies, history, sociology and culture studies.