Archive for the 'Human rights' Category

Obama’s worrisome idioms: In reaction to his Berlin speech

I was impressed with Obama’s talk on race during the primaries – particularly his ability to deal with difficult issues. What he did with race, he does not with international relations
Obama’s ability to draw attention across the globe is incredible. There are even posters of him with a local political leader in many […]

India refuses to sign cluster bomb treaty & we know not why

Here’s a news item from the Real news network on India’s refusal to sign the cluster bomb treaty along with China, US (not surprisingly), Israel, Russia and Pakistan.What is shocking though is the paltry coverage it got in Indian media for an issue that is clearly important. ToI, NDTV, Zee News, Economic Times, and […]

Murder of Lalit Kumar, NREGA activist in Palamu, Jharkhand

In one of the worst cases of attack on an NREGA activist, Lalit Kumar was murdered this week in Palamu
Right from the word go combating corruption in the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (NREGA) has been a major agenda of activists of the Right to Food Campaign. Needless to say, it brings activists into conflict […]

Babasaheb Ambedkar’s works online: Books, articles, talks

A growing collection of Ambedkar’s works are available online at Ambedkar.org
Ambedkar is easily one of the finest Indian thinkers ever. Academically, he has a degree in law, a Masters in economics (from London School of Economics), and a doctorate in social sciences (from Columbia University). At Columbia he majored in sociology and economics […]

Mernissi’s Dreams of a trespass: Best feminist work I have read yet

Dreams of trespass : Tales of a harem girlhood

Rating: 5 out of 5

Author: Fathima Mernissi

Year: 2002

Category: Feminism, Auto-ethnography, Institutions

Publisher: Perseus Books

Moroccan feminist and author weaves pure magic

“Dreams of a trespass: Tales of a harem girlhood” is an auto-ethnography and is written from the perspective of a eight year old child brought up in a harem as she learns the rules of the game in her society. As she learns the rules that would govern her life she questions them with a childish innocence and through these makes the reader realise the absurdity of many a rule that govern our own lives.

Boundaries that govern our lives

Mernissi characterises these rules as ‘boundaries’ that govern the space within which we are allowed to operate. To create a frontier, all you need is soldiers to force others to believe in it…the frontier is the mind of the powerful. An important part of education is to learn the frontiers. The frontier is not merely physical. It is a code of behaviour that regulates our lives, and all that is necessary is to internalise the rules “a law tattooed in the head”. She argues that unfortunately many of these rules go against the interests of women.

Happiness & Boundaries

The eight year old constantly questions why things are different in one harem from another, why they are different for different people, etc. Using these questions, Mernissi cleverly demolishes any notion that these rules are ‘natural’, divine, rational or even beneficial. The frustrations of her mother in sharing an intimate space with her husband, of her widowed aunt in even expressing opinions, and other women set the agenda in the book for breaking those traditions that bring misery and prevent the pursuit of happiness. As one of the characters argues, “What is more important anyway, tradition or people’s happiness?” Fatima Merinissi strikes a fine balance in arguing against restrictions that affect our happiness while emphasising constantly the possibility of pursuing happiness to some extant within our boundaries.

Women’s agency and everyday resistance

A striking feature of the book is its presentation of women’s agency at all odds and under all circumstances. The crux of the book deals with women’s struggles in their day to day lives to subvert these rules. It is every woman’s dream to trespass the boundaries made for her by others. The lives of the child’s mother, aunt, grandmother and others bring out the importance of every day resistance and its role in woman’s liberation.

Saying it as a story

By narrating her agenda in the form of a story, she is able to put a large number of factors into it such as desires, agency, frustrations, frontiers, etc. This would have been impossible in a work written in a typically academic style. The enchanting story and her sense of humour never drown the message – a call to annihilate those absurd restrictions that prevent us from intelligently pursuing happiness in our lives. I have only one final thought on this book: if I can write one like this, I shall retire with the satisfaction of having accomplished in life.

Cho Ramaswamy’s disappointing editorial

This public intellectual makes his integrity history
Just before the first phase of elections in Gujarat the current Chief Minister made a controversial remark referring to the “fake encounter” of Sohrabuddin Sheikh. His own government has gone on record stating that it’s a fake encounter – but Modi has justified it stating that Sohrabuddin has […]

Bhagalpur blindings, Gangajal & brutality in Bihar today

Brutal and grotesque punishments deter crime better than an inefficient and corrupt legal system argue many
Brutal punishments are back into public debate in India with the airing of the video below. A boy who had snatched a chain from a woman was caught and brutally punished by a mob - relentlessly. A Policeman joined […]





NOTE: These are machine translated

 

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