Vanderbilt University
Jean & Alexander Heard Library Vanderbilt University

Speaking with the Subaltern: An Exploration of the Voices of South Asian Women in Literature and Film

DiscoverArchive/Manakin Repository

Speaking with the Subaltern: An Exploration of the Voices of South Asian Women in Literature and Film

Show full item record

Title: Speaking with the Subaltern: An Exploration of the Voices of South Asian Women in Literature and Film
Author: Young, Laura
Abstract: If the subaltern could speak, what would she say? Would the women of India and South Asia talk about arranged marriages, sati (the sacrificial burning of widows), bride burnings, clitoridectomy, purdah, pativratadharma (husband worship), or female infanticide? Would they talk about the expectation of a woman’s community or the roles ascribed to them as mothers, caretakers, and the bearers of tradition? Would they talk about the denial of education, property rights, domestic violence, or denial of female sexuality? Or are these the topics on which a white Western feminist would have them speak and, if unsatisfied with what they have to say, speak for them? The key to my inquiry here is the fundamental problematic: can the subaltern represent herself and be heard in Western discourse? The subaltern is best characterized by the economically dispossessed individual whose identity is his/her difference from the elite group. For my thesis, I explore the works of three artists (literary and visual): Kamala Das, Meena Alexander, and Deepa Mehta. The women of my thesis, though born in India, hardly constitute what Spivak defines as the “true subaltern” (27). All of the women I study were born into privileged or middle-class families and all but one obtained higher levels of education.
Description: English Department Honors Thesis.
Subject: women in literature
postcolonial literature
literature and feminism
Das, Kamala
Alexander, Meena
Mehta, Deepa
Indian literature and film
LCSH Subject: Das, Kamala -- Criticism and interpretation
Feminist theory -- In literature
Alexander, Meena, 1951- -- Criticism and interpretation
Mehta, Deepa, 1949- -- Criticism and interpretation
Postcolonialism in literature
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1803/5129
Date: 2012-04-17

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Young. Laura Final Thesis.pdf 423.6Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record

Search DiscoverArchive


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

Statistics

Information