Abstract

Northeast India, the land of original inhabitants, follows a unique and fascinating culture and tradition as its inhabitants are closely attached to nature. Northeast India is one of those few places in the world, where matrilineal culture is still practiced. In Meghalaya, one of the northeastern states, the practice of matrilineality has been in existence for almost 2000 years among a few tribes. Khasi, Jaintia and Garo, the earliest ethnic communities of Meghalaya appear to be homogenous ones, as the youngest daughter becomes the custodian of the ancestral prospects. This practice where the womenfolk become the custodians of the cultural and natural artifacts has strong parallels in the theory of ecofeminism. By employing ecofeministic perspective to read the matrilineal culture of the tribes, the paper aims to make a parallel study on the ethnic women’s affinity towards nature. Ecofeminism celebrates the robust connect between women and nature and asserts that women serve as the advocates for nature rather than men. The paper, therefore, aims to investigate ecofeministic elements among the Khasi, Jaintia and Garo tribes of Meghalaya and tries to express an ecofeministic view concerning family, marriage, religion, and food culture of the Meghalaya tribes.

Highlights

  • Correspondencia: Department of English, School of Social Sciences and Languages, Vellore Institute of Technology University, Tamil Nadu-632 014, India

  • As ecofeminism believes in the bond between women and nature, matrilineal culture too gives importance to both women and nature

  • Women serve as the agents who transmit matrilineal culture and tradition

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Summary

Introduction

Most Khasis follow Christianity and “both men and women enjoy equal share of power and authority to perform religious ceremonies” (Ellena and Kyrham, 2018). Ecofeminists establish a bond between women and nature through the popularization of various customs, traditions, rituals and values which are centered on the Mother Goddess, the Earth, and various living beings. They do such through their basic knowledge, experience, critical thinking, agency, social institutions and unique role in farming, food security, livelihoods, income, age, generation, management of households and natural resources in differing eco-frameworks, participation and support in a variety of socio-cultural, political-economic, historical and environmental establishments.

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