Abstract

Intersectionality has been recognized and widely taken by interdisciplinary fields that include Cultural studies, American studies, and Media studies to demonstrate a range of social issues. It focuses on the experiences of people in a different social and political context. The intersectional framework confronts significant social division axes that include race, class, gender, and disability that function together and influence each other. These social axes operate the power structures of a particular society that can cause inequality and discrimination. In literary studies, women's representation is no more confined to European and American academic writings. Within the feminist framework, the South Asian fiction writers also demonstrate a feminist approach in their works. Pakistani authors have indicated religion's exploitation as one of the central intersectional tropes in their literary work. Bapsi Sidhwa is one of the prominent feminist voices from Pakistan in diasporic English Literature. One of her novels, Water (2006), is based on Deepa Mehta's award-winning film, explores the life of the marginal and subaltern Hindu widows in India. The novel provides an insight into the intersectional nature of the Indian Hindu widows in a patriarchal society of a subcontinent where different power domains hold and impose dominant hierarchies. The paper's objective is to highlight the intersection of religion, gender, caste and politics against the backdrop of the Indian anti-colonial movement. It shows how power relations can manipulate cultural norms and use religion as a powerful tool to establish its hegemonic control over these marginalized widows who suffer as silent victims.

Highlights

  • Human experiences reveal that every event indicates various factors that create and trigger complex discrimination among different communities

  • According to the political and social climate, hierarchies are established that frame policy concerned with structures of injustice and power manipulation

  • Sirma Bilge, mentions Thornton Dill & Zambrano (2009) in one of her writings, Intersectionality Undone, elaborate the concept of Intersectionality as "a theory and praxis, an analytical and political tool elaborated by less powerful social actors facing multiple minoritization (...) (Bilge:410)

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Summary

UNIVERSITY OF CHITRAL JOURNAL OF LINGUISTICS AND LITERATURE

The story provides an insight into the intersectional nature of the Indian Hindu widows in a patriarchal society of a subcontinent where different power domains hold and impose dominant hierarchies It shows how power relations can manipulate cultural norms and use religion as a powerful tool to establish its hegemonic control over these marginalized widows who suffer as silent victims. Zia Ahmed mentions Mohanty, who asserts that "Third World women, like Western women, are produced as subjects in historically and culturally specific ways by the societies in which they live and act as agents" (Ahmed:[92]) In this way, South Asian marginalized women's experiences reveal specific privileged positioning and power networks responsible for their exclusion and oppression. The following textual analysis of the novel Water by Bapsi Sidhwa is based on interpersonal, disciplinary, cultural, and structural interconnected domains of power that use Intersectionality as an analytic tool in feminist studies

Interpersonal Domain of Power
Disciplinary Domain of Power
Cultural Domain of Power
Structural Domain of Power
Works Cited
Full Text
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