Baptising Pandita Ramabai: Faith and religiosity in the nineteenth-century social reform movements of colonial India

This essay aims to understand the role of religion in the social work of Pandita Ramabai (1858-1922). By focusing on a twenty-five-year period commencing with her conversion to Christianity in 1883, we argue that religion constructed a political framework for her work in Sharada Sadan and Mukti Miss...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Indian economic and social history review 2021-07, Vol.58 (3), p.393-424
Hauptverfasser: Bhagabati, Dikshit Sarma, Sinha, Prithvi, Garg, Sneha
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creator Bhagabati, Dikshit Sarma
Sinha, Prithvi
Garg, Sneha
description This essay aims to understand the role of religion in the social work of Pandita Ramabai (1858-1922). By focusing on a twenty-five-year period commencing with her conversion to Christianity in 1883, we argue that religion constructed a political framework for her work in Sharada Sadan and Mukti Mission. There is a lacuna in the conventional scholarship that underplays the nuances of religion in Ramabai’s reform efforts, which we try to fill by conceptualising faith and religiosity as two distinct signifiers of her private and public religious presentations respectively. Drawing on her published letters, the annual reports of the Ramabai Association in America, and a number of evangelical periodicals published during her lifetime, we analyse how she explored Christianity not just as a personal faith but also as a conduit for funds. The conversion enabled her access to American supporters, concomitantly consolidating their claim over her social work. Her peculiar religious identity—a conflation of Hinduism and Christianity—provoked strong protests from the Hindu orthodoxy while leading to a fall-out with the evangelists at the same time. Ramabai shaped the public portrayal of her religiosity to maximise support from American patrons, the colonial state, and liberal Indians, resisting the orthodoxy’s oppositions with these material exploits. Rather than surrendering to patriarchal cynicism, she capitalised on the socio-political volatilities of colonial India to further the nascent women’s movement.
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subjects 19th century
Annual reports
Christianity
Colonialism
Cynicism
Evangelicalism
Evangelism
Hinduism
Periodicals
Religion
Religiosity
Religious beliefs
Religious conversion
Religious identity
Religious orthodoxy
Social reform
Social work
title Baptising Pandita Ramabai: Faith and religiosity in the nineteenth-century social reform movements of colonial India
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