Lustful Women, Elusive Lovers: Identifying Males as Objects of Female Desire
One of the more popular self-projections of women in the oral tradition of rural north India is the image of a lustful woman, which directly contradicts the dominant and ideal image of the chaste woman and offers an alternative moral perspective on kinship, gender, sexuality and norms of behaviour....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Indian journal of gender studies 2001, Vol.8 (1), p.23-50 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | One of the more popular self-projections of women in the oral tradition of rural north India is
the image of a lustful woman, which directly contradicts the dominant and ideal image of the
chaste woman and offers an alternative moral perspective on kinship, gender, sexuality and
norms of behaviour. This article explores the construction of the lustful woman based exclu
sively upon women's songs produced collectively by women and sung by women for an audi
ence consisting purely of women. It seeks to understand how and why this image, common to
both men and women's songs, has different connotations and messages. The construction of
meaning around this image is explored in the social context of power relations and status con
siderations existing within the family, caste and class. As such, the article seeks to understand
how far the subversiveness of these songs finds its echo in the actual transgressive behaviour of
women in caste/class and gender relationships, and with what effect. It highlights the construc
tion of masculinity, pleasure and deprivation, which cuts across several societal hierarchies. The
inevitable conflict within a worldview where different and contradictory beliefs and desires
coexist brings to the fore the interface between ideology and practice. |
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ISSN: | 0971-5215 0973-0672 |
DOI: | 10.1177/097152150100800102 |