Relocating Gender in SIKH HISTORY: Transformation, Meaning and Identity

Relocating Gender in SIKH HISTORY: Transformation, Meaning and Identity

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Book Specification

Item Code: IDG584
Author: DORIS R. JAKOKBSH
Publisher: Oxford University Press, New Delhi
Language: English
Edition: 2003
ISBN: 0195663152
Pages: 296
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 8.7" X 5.6"

Book Description

About the Book:

This penetrating volume is one of the first to chart the history of gender construction in Sikhism. Focusing specifically on the Singh Sabha reform movement-spearheaded by British-educated Sikhs in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries-in analyses the development of gender ideals under the Sikh gurus, and their adaptation and in some cases transformation by the new intellectual elite.

The Singh Sabha reform movement aimed at resurrecting reform movement aimed at resurrecting the 'purity' of Sikhism as it existed during what was considered the golden age of the guru period. The reformers, armed with western education and the Victorian ideals of the high colonial era, sought to reinterpret tradition according to their own needs and visions. In its analysis of the ideology of gender and identity promoted by thee Singh Sabha reformers, the study looks at both male and female ideals and the ways in which these were informed by notions of gender in Victorian Britain. It also examines the development of novel ritual identities, exploring the educational initiatives meant to produce reformed Sikhs, unadulterated by popular traditions that were integral to the ritual universe of the populace. In the process, the author challenges current understandings of the inclusion of women in the ritual formations of Sikhs.

A major contribution to an uncharted field of research, this wide-ranging study will attract students and scholars of gender studies, the Sikh religion, and Sough Asian colonial history as well as general readers interested in historical understanding of the role of women within Sikhism.

About the Author:

Doris R. Jakobsh is an Instructor in Religion, Renison College, University of Waterloo, Canada.

CONTENTS

Acknowledgements x
Introduction 1
ONE The Construction of Women in Sikh History and Religion-Attitudes and Assumptions An Overview of Secondary Sources 7
The Principle of Silence 8
The Principle of Negation 10
The Principle of Accommodation 12
The Principle of Idealization 16
Conclusion: Moving Beyond Description 18
TWO The Development of the Early Sikh Tradition A Gender Perspective 22
The Milieu 22
The Early Guru Period 23
The Janam-sakhis 27
The Later Guru Period 35
Gender and the Theology o Difference 37
'The Wiles of Women' 44
The Chaupa Singh Rahit-nama 46
Conclusion 47
THREE Of Colony and Gender
The Politics of Difference and Similarity
50
Colonization and the Politics of Difference 53
Manliness, Morality and the Politics of Similarity 58
Construction of Womanhood: The British in India 69
The Politics of Similarity and its discontents 80
FOUR Contextualizing Reform in Nineteenth Century
Punjab: Continuity and Change
85
Dissension and Control: The Punjab Administration and
Kuka Reform
86
The Genesis of the Punjab Intelligentsia 89
Indian Reform, the Missionary Undertaking and the 'Women's Question' 99
Positioning Punjab's Womanhood: Indigenous
Politics Principles and the Colonial Milieu
105
Dissenting Visions of Gender Reform:
Guru Ram Singh and the Namdhari Sikhs
110
Contextualizing Women's Reform in the Nineteenth
Century: Contrasting Perspectives
116
Dayananda's Arya Samaj Movement and Singh
Sabha Reforms: Contesting Claims and Rhetoric
119
FIVE Education, Gender Codes and Politics 127
The Sikhs and Female Education: The Missionary
Endeavour, Sikh Orthodox Tradition and Reform
Initiatives: An Overview
129
The Tat Khalsa and its Educational Ideals 132
The Politics of Gender: The Home and the World 134
The Sikh Kanya Mahavidyala 144
The Politics of Language: A Gendered Perspective 148
The Sikh Educational Conference: Enlarging Female
Space
150
Sikh Role Models and the Tat Khalsa: Crisis of Authority 153
Bhai Vir Sing and the Invention of Tradition 160
The Political Milieu: Agitation and Allegiance 168
The Rhetoric of Reform, Education and the
Politics of Patriotism
172
SIX Extending Male Control: 179
The Gentrified Imagination and Popular Female Traditions
The Anand Marriage Bill: Gender Politics, Rhetoric, and Reason
179
Extending Male Control: The 'New Patriarchy' 194
Popular Female Traditions and the Gentrified Imagination 203
SEVEN Redefining the Ritual Drama:
The Feminization of Ritual
210
Creation and Revision-The Feminization of Ritual 210
What's in a Name? Circumscribing Sikh Female
Nomenclature
219
Re-defining the Sikh Code of Conduct in the
Twentieth Century
228
Contemporary Scholars and Rewriting of History 232
Overview 238
Women in the Singh Sabha Movement-Agents of Change or Casualties of Reform? 240
Circumventing Hegemony: Alignment and Resistance 244
Women's Reform-Laying the Foundation for a New Era 247
Appendix 251
References and Selected Bibliography 255
Index 283


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