Gendered Citizenship: Historical and Conceptual Explorations
Anupama Roy
Price
1140.00
ISBN
9788125052845
Language
English
Pages
308
Format
Paperback
Dimensions
140 x 216 mm
Year of Publishing
2013
Territorial Rights
World
Imprint
Orient BlackSwan

Through successive historical periods, ‘becoming a citizen’ has involved a gradual extension of equal membership to more and more persons and groups. However, the promise of equality masks the exclusionary framework of caste hierarchies, gender differences, and religious divides, which determine actual experiences of citizenship.

Historically, citizenship was constituted through a series of exclusions whereby large sections of people, (colonised societies, slaves, women and workers) were considered inadequate for it. Citizenship is therefore made up of multiple margins, but it also releases powerful new imaginaries and practices of citizenship.

This revised edition of Gendered Citizenship (first published in 2005) examines the gendering of citizenship. In the context of resistance against the colonial rule, the language of citizenship that emerged in late colonial India was based on a gendered notion of the community—both national and political.

Pulling in arguments on how the Indian Constitution transformed the idea of citizenship, it teases out the plural sites of citizenship which existed at this moment, and traces the forms in which idioms of citizenship endure in contemporary times.  It explores in particular the landscapes of new citizenship which have emerged in the form of flexible citizenship with graded entitlements, as distinguished from spaces of stable citizenship.  It proposes that a concerted effort towards an interactive public space can congeal into shared bonds of citizenship.

This book will be valuable for advanced students, researchers and scholars of political science, history, sociology and gender studies. It would also be helpful to those studying social exclusion and the general reader interested in debates over gender and citizenship.

Anupama Roy is Professor at the Centre for Political Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi.

Preface to this Edition
Acknowledgements

1. Making Citizenship Familiar
2. Anticolonial Nationalisms, the Women’s Question, and Citizenship
3. The Domestic, Domesticity, and Women Citizens in Late Colonial India
4. The ‘Womanly Vote’ and Women Citizens: Debates on Women’s Franchise in Late Colonial India
5. The Nation and Its ‘Constitution’: The Text and Context of Citizenship
6. ‘New Citizenship’: Citizenship in an Age of Globalisation

Bibliography
Index

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