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dc.contributor.authorPrashant
dc.date.accessioned2023-05-04T07:54:28Z
dc.date.issued2023-04-11
dc.date.updated2023-05-03T15:23:00Z
dc.description.abstractThis thesis investigates the working of laws and judicial mechanisms, including religious and caste assemblies, in order to uncover impacts of the Maratha state’s religious and political ideologies and ambitions on the predicaments of women. Maratha state formation from 1674 and its imperial rule in the eighteenth century (prior to British control in 1818) was built and maintained on the foundation, perpetuation and dissemination of patriarchal Brahmanism, i.e., ideological and institutional control, suppression and exploitation of women, as well as both lower-caste and Muslim men, privileging Brahmins. To buttress their authority, the Maratha state adopted and implemented patriarchal-Brahmanical socio-religious norms, transmitted in society through religious discourse, practices and celebration, as unavoidable parts of state law. Thus, the Maratha state centrally deployed the office of chief-justice and panditarāva (religious judge) and in the countryside (since its rule was not as accessible and potent as in the capital [Pune] and its hinterland) it collaborated with pre-existing community tribunals, namely, religious and caste assemblies, which facilitated the Maratha state’s rule in the countryside and legitimised and empowered these assemblies’ tribunal practices. These processes aggravated the predicaments of women and lower caste and Muslim men as the groups which were discriminated against socially, due to their gender and caste, began to be discriminated against legally. Given the misogyny and caste prejudice within Brahmanical norms, my PhD research examines how their legal enforcement affected the lives of women belonging to different castes and religions. The secondary literature regarding gender in Maratha historiography, viewed women, unlike men, as a single entity with emphasis placed on how patriarchy affected upper caste women. Even when intersectionality (caste) in women’s history was researched, the emphasis was still on how Brahminism (caste) affected those who were at the pinnacle of caste hierarchy. Since Brahmin women could not divorce and remarry and either followed Shastric widowhood or undertook sati, it was concluded that their life was even worse than that of lower caste women. Considering that caste was (still) a determinant of people’s lifestyle, social status and relations, occupation (thus also class and economy) and treatment, I found such neglect of intersectionality with regard to lower caste and Muslim women in Maratha history a glaring gap. My research, hence, probes how caste affected women of different castes within and outside the governing system. It explores distinct lived experiences as well as legal treatments of women ranging from domestic to public spheres, namely women’s sexual and intimate agencies, domestic abuse committed against and by women, crime and violence against women, the practice of sati and the tradition of dancing women. In all these areas, it emphasises the influence of caste and gender and the varying nature of governmental control in the respective regions. Unlike previous research my research shows that the perceived severity and punishment of crimes, even in the capital city of Pune, depended on the caste and gender of the people involved and the varying levels and types of governmental control. Criminal justice was shaped by patriarchal Brahmanism, derived from and influenced by Shastric traditions and ideologies. While patriarchal Brahmanism was omnipresent, its effects differed widely. While upper caste women were denied divorce and remarriage and were forced into Shastric widowhood or became sati, they also had privileges due to their caste status. For example, they lived in big houses situated in the main village, employed servants and slaves and were treated with respect within and outside the governing system. Whereas lower caste women including Muslims were (as now) subject to the uttermost cruelties, discrimination and harshest realities whether in terms of their daily lifestyle (living in small houses or structures at the peripheries and worked within and outside their household for their livelihood), untouchability, servitude (slavery) and in their legal treatment and also experienced the most heinous crimes (rape and femicide). Thus, it is proposed that unlike upper caste women, lower caste women were at the margins of caste, class and gender, and their treatment and experience within and outside the governing system was worse than all men and upper caste women and they were discriminated against by all of them under the Maratha state’s enforcement of patriarchal Brahmanism. Nonetheless, my research does not simply record a passive story of women’s repression, but also explores evidence for their deviancy, criminality, negotiation, resistance, power and agency, whether in sexual acts, domestic abuse, rape, elopement, sati or the profession of dancing, showing how women found allies among kinsmen and women, and not only sought but also gained some autonomy, power and wealth, including social capital, in their personal and professional lives.en_GB
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10871/133074
dc.publisherUniversity of Exeteren_GB
dc.rights.embargoreasonSince I will be publishing articles from and transform my thesis into a monograph, I need such embargo period. Embargo 30/9/24en_GB
dc.subjectIndian Historyen_GB
dc.subjectMaratha historyen_GB
dc.subjectMarathasen_GB
dc.subjectMaratha Empireen_GB
dc.subjectGender historyen_GB
dc.subjectCaste historyen_GB
dc.subjectHistory of sexen_GB
dc.subjectDomestic abuseen_GB
dc.subjectCrime and violenceen_GB
dc.subjectFemale criminalityen_GB
dc.subjectWomen's criminalityen_GB
dc.subjectDancing womenen_GB
dc.subjectCourtesansen_GB
dc.subjectSatien_GB
dc.subjectLegal historyen_GB
dc.subjectMaratha justiceen_GB
dc.subjectMaratha judicial systemen_GB
dc.subjectMaratha lawen_GB
dc.subjectColonial lawen_GB
dc.subjectColonial justiceen_GB
dc.subjectBombay Presidencyen_GB
dc.subjectEnglish East India Companyen_GB
dc.subjectKalāvantīnaen_GB
dc.subjectKalāvantīnsen_GB
dc.subjectKalavantinaen_GB
dc.subjectKalavantinsen_GB
dc.subjectNāyekīnaen_GB
dc.subjectNāīkīnaen_GB
dc.subjectNāīkīnsen_GB
dc.subjectNayekinaen_GB
dc.subjectNayekinsen_GB
dc.subjectNaikinen_GB
dc.subjectKasabīnaen_GB
dc.subjectKasabīnsen_GB
dc.subjectKasabinen_GB
dc.subjectKasabinsen_GB
dc.subjectFemale Agencyen_GB
dc.subjectWomen's agencyen_GB
dc.subjectShivajien_GB
dc.subjectSambhajien_GB
dc.subjectRajaramen_GB
dc.subjectTarabaien_GB
dc.subjectShahuen_GB
dc.subjectPeshwaen_GB
dc.subjectPeshwasen_GB
dc.subjectPeshwa Bajiraven_GB
dc.subjectPeshwa Madhavraven_GB
dc.subjectPeshwa Bajirav IIen_GB
dc.subjectPeshwa Balaji Bajiraven_GB
dc.subjectNana Saheben_GB
dc.subjectMarathien_GB
dc.subjectMarathi documentsen_GB
dc.subjectMastanien_GB
dc.subjectRapeen_GB
dc.subjectInfidelity, Adultery, Extramarital sex, premarital sexen_GB
dc.subjectFemale land grantsen_GB
dc.subjectWomen's land grantsen_GB
dc.subjectJatisabhaen_GB
dc.subjectJātīsabhāen_GB
dc.subjectDharmasabhaen_GB
dc.subjectDharmasabhāen_GB
dc.subjectModi documentsen_GB
dc.subjectModi scripten_GB
dc.subjectWidowsen_GB
dc.subjectFemale Slaveryen_GB
dc.subjectSlaveryen_GB
dc.subjectKotwalen_GB
dc.subjectKotavālen_GB
dc.subjectCaste discrimination, Caste Bias, Caste Prejudiceen_GB
dc.subjectGender discriination, Gender prejudice, Gender Biasen_GB
dc.subjectPatriarchyen_GB
dc.subjectBrahminismen_GB
dc.subjectBrahmanismen_GB
dc.subjectShastrasen_GB
dc.subjectHindu lawsen_GB
dc.subjectSmritisen_GB
dc.subjectHomosexualityen_GB
dc.subjectTransgenderen_GB
dc.subjectHijdasen_GB
dc.subjecthijadāsen_GB
dc.subjectSame-sex loveen_GB
dc.subjectMarriage and divorceen_GB
dc.subjectFemicideen_GB
dc.subjectFemale suicideen_GB
dc.subjectWomen's Suicideen_GB
dc.subjectwomen's kidnappingen_GB
dc.subjectElopementen_GB
dc.subjectForced Marriageen_GB
dc.subjectForcible sexen_GB
dc.subjectWomen's desertion or abandonmenten_GB
dc.subjectPune Archivesen_GB
dc.subjectBISMen_GB
dc.subjectMaharashtra State Archivesen_GB
dc.subjectBritish Libraryen_GB
dc.subjectWomen's beatingen_GB
dc.subjectIntercaste sexen_GB
dc.subjectInter-religious sexen_GB
dc.subjectColonial Archivesen_GB
dc.subjectIndia Office Recordsen_GB
dc.subjectBombay Judicial Consultationsen_GB
dc.subjectMutilationen_GB
dc.subjectPenal-servitudeen_GB
dc.subjectCapital Punishmenten_GB
dc.subjectExecutionen_GB
dc.subjectIncarcerationen_GB
dc.subjectPenanceen_GB
dc.subjectBoycotten_GB
dc.subjectCaste expulsionen_GB
dc.subjectexcommunicationen_GB
dc.subjectPrayaschiten_GB
dc.subjectPrāyascitaen_GB
dc.subjectDalit Feminismen_GB
dc.subjectDalit Historyen_GB
dc.subjectIntersectionalityen_GB
dc.subjectFeminismen_GB
dc.subjectEarly Modern historyen_GB
dc.subjectWestern Indian Historyen_GB
dc.subjectWest Indiaen_GB
dc.subjectMaharashtrian Historyen_GB
dc.subjectMaharashtraen_GB
dc.subjectseventeen-eighteen century maratha historyen_GB
dc.subjectseventeen and eighteen centuries Western Indian Historyen_GB
dc.subjectEarly Colonial rule in Bombay Presidencyen_GB
dc.titleLegalising and Enforcing Socio-Religious Norms: The State, Caste and Positions of Women in the Maratha Empire, 1674-1818en_GB
dc.typeThesis or dissertationen_GB
dc.date.available2023-05-04T07:54:28Z
dc.contributor.advisorChatterjee, Nandini
dc.contributor.advisorBarry, Jonathan
dc.contributor.advisorWard, Richard
dc.publisher.departmentFaculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences (History)
dc.rights.urihttp://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserveden_GB
dc.type.degreetitleDoctor of Philosophy in History
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoral
dc.type.qualificationnameDoctoral Thesis
rioxxterms.versionNAen_GB
rioxxterms.licenseref.startdate2023-04-11
rioxxterms.typeThesisen_GB
refterms.dateFOA2023-05-04T07:54:31Z


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