Abstract

Dalit resistance gained prominence in postcolonial India through Dalit literature, with Dalit life writing emerging as a significant way to address ongoing problems and issues faced by Dalit communities. Dalit personal narratives are not mere reflections into the past but lived experiences with a timely and current sociological base. Dalit narratives have become a platform for social and political activism against various hegemonic discourses that otherwise exclude the experiences of the Dalit population. Moreover, Dalit women suffer many layers of oppression and violence, and there is a necessity to understand the intersectionality of Dalit women’s realities. Hence this article analyses select personal narratives of two Dalit women writers: P. Sivakami’s The Grip of Change ([1989] 2006) and ₹Author’s Notes: Gowri’ ([1999] 2006); and Bama’s Karukku ([1992] 2005). The ₹Author’s Notes: Gowri’ is a reflection on The Grip of Change and the two narratives are collectively referred to as The Grip of Change. This article attempts to understand the extent to which Dalit personal narratives transform from aesthetics to activism. This article analyses the narrative technique and form used in the narratives and explores how the narratives expose embodied issues to foster activism in and through the content.

Highlights

  • The 15th Indian Census conducted in 2011 recorded 201 million people belonging to various Dalit communities, making up of 16.6% of the total Indian population of approximately 1.2 billion

  • Dalits are discriminated against based on a hierarchical socio-religious Hindu order which is commonly known as the caste system

  • The caste identity is given at birth and ‘is permanent and hereditary’ (D’Souza, 2012, p. 13), which could be why Dalits are discriminated against even untouchability was abolished in 1949

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The 15th Indian Census conducted in 2011 recorded 201 million people belonging to various Dalit communities, making up of 16.6% of the total Indian population of approximately 1.2 billion. Caste, class, discrimination, trauma, activism, advocacy, aesthetics, testimonio, autobiography, biography, collective Dalit women writers use their personal narratives to portray and protest against this existing oppressive network of relationships. Dalit life writing ‘situates personal and collective suffering within a larger discourse of human rights’

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call