Article contents
A post-colonial patriarchy? Representing family in the Indian nation-state
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
Abstract
That the transition to self-governance under a nation-state has not been accompanied by the greater focus on Indian citizens’ welfare which many expected, has been the source of much confusion and disappointment. Looking at late-colonial debates about property rights under Hindu personal law, this paper seeks to explain why people assumed that independence could change the relationship between the state and Indian society, and also why this has not come about. It argues that, from the latter half of the nineteenth century, economic, social, and political changes placed pressure on the very hierarchical structures of joint-family patriarchy that colonial rule had hitherto depended on. Calls for family reform seemed, at certain moments, to critique patriarchal control and social order more generally, creating the intellectual space to rethink the place of women within the family, and the state more widely. Yet, while couched in the language of women's rights, underpinning these reform debates was an interest to change men's property rights and enhance their individual control over the family. Thus, the interwar years witnessed not just a breaking down of an old colonial patriarchal order, but also the establishment of a new, post-colonial patriarchy based around the authority of the propertied husband.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Modern Asian Studies , Volume 44 , Issue 1: The politics of work, family and community in India , January 2010 , pp. 121 - 144
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009
References
1 Pandey, Gyanendra, ‘The Prose of Otherness’ in Pandey, Gyanendra & Chatterjee, Partha, (eds.), Subaltern Studies, 7 (Delhi, 1994) pp. 204–206Google Scholar.
2 Selected works of Jawaharlal Nehru (2nd series), Vol. 3, S. Gopal (ed.) (Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund: Oxford University Press, New Delhi, circa 1984), p. 135.
3 Austin, Granville, The Indian Constitution: Cornerstone of a Nation (Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1999 edn., 1966), pp. 50–61Google Scholar.
4 Towards Equality: Report of the Committee on the Status of Women in India, Government of India, Ministry of Education and Social Welfare, Department of Social Welfare, New Delhi (1974), p. i.
5 Basu, Aparna & Ray, Bharati (eds.), Women's struggle: a history of the All-India Women's movement 1927–1990 (Manohar. New Delhi, 1990), pp. 55–82Google Scholar; Kumar, Radha, The history of doing: an illustrated account of movement for women's rights and feminism in India 1800–1990 (Zubaan, New Delhi, 1993), chapters 4 & 5Google Scholar; Forbes, Geraldine, Women in modern India (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1996), pp. 112–120, 129–155CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
6 Sinha, Mrinalini, Specters of Mother India: the global restructuring of an Empire (Duke University Press, Durham & London, 2006), especially pp. 180–196, 212–222CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
7 Enacted in October 1929, the Government of India instructed local officials to avoid implementing its measures for fear of stirring up unrest. Concerned in particular about reactions from the Muslim community, the Central Government circulated orders to Provincial Governments a week before the Bill was due to come into operation that ‘. . . if the Act is allowed to come into operation as quietly as possible there is some ground for hoping that the present agitation may gradually subside. . . . District Magistrates should be warned to deal very cautiously with complaints filed under the Act and to follow the preliminary procedure laid down without undue haste. [The Government] are [sic] of opinion that as a general proposition until experience has been gained of the effect of the Act, only minimal sentences should be imposed in cases of conviction and that, if possible, sentences should be avoided.’ Very secret express letter from E.H. Brandon, Assistant Secretary, Home Department, Government of India to Provincial Governments, 23rd March 1930, F.482/1929 Judicial Civil, Uttar Pradesh State Archive. As a result, the Bill was left un-enforced in almost all provinces and became a virtual dead letter.
8 On the different impact of this shift in patriarchy on Hindu and Muslim personal law, and the consequences for post-colonial citizenship see Newbigin, Eleanor, ‘The codification of personal law and secular citizenship: revisiting the history of law reform in late colonial India’, Indian Economic and Social History Review—hereafter IESHR—46.1 (2009), pp. 83–104CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
9 Charles Heimsath ignores the debates about property rights altogether, suggesting that ‘the opponents of the Age of Consent Bill could be held responsible for the fact that no major social reform legislation was passed between 1891 and 1929, when minimum ages for marriage were established by the Sarda Act.’ ‘The origin and enactment of the Indian Age of Consent Bill, 1891’ The Journal of Asian Studies 21, no. 4, (August, 1962), p. 504.
10 Chandavarkar, R., ‘Customs of Governance: Colonialism and Democracy in Twentieth Century India’ Modern Asian Studies 41, no. 3 (May 2007), pp. 441–470CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
11 Seal, Anil, The Emergence of Indian Nationalism: Competition and Collaboration in the Later Nineteenth Century (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1971), pp. 4–11, 32–113Google Scholar; Bayly, C.A., The Local Roots of Indian Politics: Allahabad 1880–1920 (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1975), pp. 8–18, Chapter 3Google Scholar.
12 Washbrook, David ‘The rhetoric of democracy and development in late colonial India’ in Jayal, Niraja Gopal, Democracy in India (Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 2001), pp. 82–96Google Scholar.
13 Kaviraj, Sudipta, ‘On state, society and discourse in India’ in Manor, James, (ed.), Rethinking third world politics (Longman, London 1991), pp. 72–99Google Scholar; Chatterjee, Partha, The politics of the governed: reflections on popular politics in most of the world (Columbia University Press, New York, 2004)Google Scholar.
14 O'Hanlon, Rosalind, ‘Issues of widowhood: gender and resistance in colonial western India’ in Haynes, Douglas and Prakash, Gyan (eds.), Contesting power: resistance and everyday social relations in South Asia (Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1991), pp. 62–108Google Scholar; Chakravarti, Uma, Rewriting history: the life and times of Pandita Ramabai (Kali for Women, New Delhi, 1998)Google Scholar; Chatterjee, Indrani, Gender, slavery and law in Colonial India (Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1999)Google Scholar.
15 Ibid, see also Rachel Lara Sturman, ‘Family values: refashioning property and family in colonial Bombay Presidency, 1818–1937’, Unpublished thesis, University of California, Davis, 2001; Talwar Oldenberg, Veena, Dowry murder: the imperial origins of a cultural crime (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2002)Google Scholar; Arunima, G., There comes papa: colonialism and the transformation of matriliny in Kerala, Malabar c. 1850–1940 (Orient Longman, Hyderabad, 2003)Google Scholar.
16 Rosalind O'Hanlon, ‘Issues of widowhood’, pp. 77–78.
17 Washbrook, David, ‘Law, state and agrarian society in colonial India’ Modern Asian Studies 15, no. 3, (1981), p. 654CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
18 C.A. Bayly, The Local Roots of Indian Politics: pp. 33–39; Bayly, C.A., Empire and information: Intelligence gathering and social communication in India 1780–1870 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1996), pp. 49–51Google Scholar.
19 Bayly, Susan, Caste, society and politics in India from the eighteenth century to the modern age (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1999), pp. 81–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
20 Rosalind O'Hanlon, ‘Issues of widowhood’, pp. 77–78.
21 For example, in Punjab, where the legal system differentiated between landowners, regardless of their religious identity, and non-land owners. Gilmartin, David, Empire and Islam: Punjab and the making of Pakistan (I.B. Tauris, London, 1988), pp. 13–18Google Scholar.
22 Cohn, Bernard, Colonialism and its forms of knowledge: the British in India (Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1996), pp. 65–8Google Scholar; C.A. Bayly, Empire and information, especially pp. 78–88.
23 Gilmartin, David, ‘Kinship, women and politics’ in Minault, G. (ed.), The extended family: women and political participation in India and Pakistan (Chanakya, Delhi, 1981), pp. 151–170Google Scholar; Derrett, J. D. M., Religion, law and the state in India (Faber & Faber, London, 1968), Chapter 9Google Scholar.
24 Kozlowski, Gregory C., Muslim endowments and society in British India (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1985), p. 128–131CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
25 Macnaghten, W.H., Principles of Moohumudan Law (The Brahma Samaj Press. 1825; reprint Calcutta, 1861), p. IGoogle Scholar. cited in Powers, David S., ‘Orientalism, Colonialism, and Legal History: The Attack on Muslim Family Endowments in Algeria and India’ Comparative Studies in Society and History 31, no. 3 (July 1989), p. 556CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
26 Bernard Cohn, Colonialism and its forms of knowledge, pp. 71–75.
27 For a more detailed description of the various schools of Hindu law see Agarwal, Bina, A field of one's own (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1994), pp. 84–91Google Scholar; Derrett, Religion, Law and the state in India, pp. 97–121; Mitter, D.N., The position of women in Hindu Law (Inter-India Publications, Delhi 1913, reprinted 1989), especially pp. 43–47Google Scholar.
28 Washbrook, ‘Law, state and agrarian society’, pp. 669–673.
29 Baker, Christopher John, An Indian Rural Economy 1880–1955: The Tamilnad Countryside (Clarendon, Oxford, 1984), Chapters 2 and 3Google Scholar. Chandavarkar, RajThe origins of industrial capitalism in India: business strategies and the working classes in Bombay, 1900–1940 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1994), Chapter 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sarkar, Tanika, Hindu wife, Hindu nation (Hurst & Co., London, 2001), pp. 8–16Google Scholar.
30 Not all Muslims were subject to this strict colonial interpretation of Koranic law. Certain communities, including designated Muslim landholders in Bengal and Punjab, as well as Khojah and Memon Muslims, were governed according to separate customary traditions and legislation. Kozlowski, Muslim endowments, pp. 71–72. Powers, ‘Orientalism, Colonialism, and Legal History’, pp. 554–560.
31 British judges rejected arguments that waqf law, a system of endowment that had developed in Islamic societies to deal with such difficulties, could be used to endow not only religious institutions but also family members. As a result, it could be very difficult to protect a family estate against fragmentation or to prevent a profligate relative squandering the estate, leaving nothing for future generations. Kugle, Scott Alan, ‘Framed, blamed and renamed: the recasting of Islamic jurisprudence in colonial South Asia’ Modern Asian Studies, 35, No. 2 (2001), pp. 286–294CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
32 For but one example of this see Sahu Ram Chandra vs. Bhup Singh [(1917) ILR, 39 All. 377 (PC)].
33 Misra, B.B., The Indian middle classes (Oxford University Press, London, 1961), pp. 308–312, 316–324Google Scholar.
34 Kozlowski, Muslim endowments, pp. 81–85, 116–120.
35 Sreenivas, Mytheli, ‘Conjugality and capital: gender, families and property under colonial law in India’ Journal of Asian Studies, 63, no. 4 (November, 2004), pp. 942–943CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
36 See Denault, Leigh, ‘Partition and the politics of the joint family in nineteenth-century India’, IESHR, 46.1 (2009), pp. 27–56Google Scholar.
37 For a brief history of the legal debates about the joint family see the statement of objects and reasons for A Bill to define the liability of a Hindu coparcener, brought by Hari Singh Gour in 1923, Government of Bombay—hereafter GoB—Home Department, F.2730/1923, Maharshtra State Archives.
38 Tomlinson, B.R, The economy of modern India (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1993), pp. 51–55Google Scholar; Baker, An Indian rural economy, pp. 469–519; Washbrook, ‘Law, state and agrarian society’, pp. 702–711.
39 Gallagher, J. ‘Nationalism and the Crisis of Empire, 1919–1922’, Modern Asian Studies 15, no. 3, (1981), pp. 355–368CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
40 Levy, Harold Lewis, ‘Lawyer-scholars, lawyer-politicians and the Hindu Code Bill, 1921–1956’ Law and Society Review 3, no. 2/3 (November 1968 to February 1969), pp. 303–304CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
41 Sen, Samita, Women and labour in late colonial India (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1999), Chapters 1 & 2Google Scholar.
42 Mytheli Sreenivas, ‘Conjugality and capital’ pp. 938–942.
43 Sinha, Mrinalini, ‘The lineage of the ‘Indian’ modern: rhetoric, agency and the Sarda Act in late colonial India’ in Burton, A. (ed.), Gender, sexuality and colonial modernities (Routledge, London, 1999), pp. 207–220Google Scholar.
44 Note by H. Moncrieff Smith 1 February 1922, Government of India (hereafter GoI), Home Department F.822/1922 Judicial, National Archives of India (NAI).
45 Pammal Sambanda Mudaliar (1873–1964) was a legal practitioner in Georgetown and later became judge of the Small Causes Court. He combined his interest in the law with a love of theatre and music. He composed ragas, adapted Shakespeare and wrote his own plays for Tamil audiences. He has been hailed as ‘the Father of Modern Tamil theatre’ The Hindu, http://www.thehindu.com/thehindu/fr/2002/09/27/stories/2002092701130300.htm [27 September 2002].
46 Recommendation to the central legislature by Mr Sambanda Mudaliar, an elected member of the assembly representing Salem and Coimbatore cum North Arcot (Non-Muhammaden Rural) 12 January 1922, GoI Home Department F.755/1922 Judicial NAI.
47 Mayukha law was a sub-school of Mitakshara law followed by communities along the western coast of India based on the Vyavahara Mayukha, seventeenth-century commentary by Nilakantha. Under Mayukha law daughters enjoyed an absolute estate over property inherited from their father, though they inherited under the same conditions as daughters governed by more mainstream Mitakshara law, i.e. in the absence of both male heirs and a widowed mother.
48 A Bill to alter the order in which certain heirs of a deceased Hindu dying intestate are entitled to succeed to his estate. GoI Home Department Judicial, F.155/1922 NAI.
49 Undated note by Sapru, GoI Home Department F.155/1922 Judicial NAI.
50 The eminent Hindu jurist Dr (later Sir) Hari Singh Gour was a keen advocate of law reform on the grounds of consistency and clarity of administration. In 1919 he published his Hindu Code in which he called for Hindu law to be codified to aid its administration. Along with many other members of his profession, Gour entered the colonial legislatures in the 1920s and used his position there to continue to push forward his reform agenda. Gour brought a range of bills to reform Hindu law including his Bill to define the liability of a Hindu coparcener. GoB Home Department, F.2730/1923, Maharashtra State Archives (MSA).
51 As a result, it prompted an outcry from a broad spectrum of Indian society, including Annie Besant, Rabindranath Tagore and Lala Lajput Rai. Bombay Chronicle 24 October 1927, Manchester Guardian on 29 September 1927. See also press cuttings GOB Home Department (Special) F.715/1927, MSA.
52 Sinha, ‘The lineage of the ‘Indian’ modern’, pp. 214–216.
53 One of the main policies of the INC was, of course, that independence had to take priority over social reform and, in particular, the women's question. See Kishwar, Madhu, ‘Gandhi on Women’ Economic and Political Weekly XX, no. 40 & 41 (1985), pp. 753–758, 1691–1701Google Scholar.
54 This bill was a revived copy of a measure introduced to the Madras legislature in 1891 by Vembakkam Bhashyam Iyengar. Mytheli Sreenivas, ‘Conjugality and capital’, p. 944–945.
55 Statement of Objects and Reasons for Jayakar's Hindu Gains of Learning Bill, 12 July 1929, GoI, Home Department, F.624/1929, Judicial NAI.
56 Jayakar applied for sanction to introduce his bill in late July 1929. It was eventually passed as the Hindu Gains of Learning Act, Act XXX of 1930, on 25 July 1930. Sarda introduced his bill for the first time at the end of 1926; it was referred to a select committee the following year. It was passed as Act XIX of 1929 on 1 October 1929, coming into force on 1 April 1930.
57 At the time of India's entry to the Second World War, the central legislature faced a Hindu Law of Inheritance (Amendment) Bill, a Hindu Women's Property Bill, a Hindu Women's Estate Bill and a Hindu Married Women's Right to Separate Residence and Maintenance Bill as well as three proposed revisions to the Hindu Women's Property Act, which itself had been amended only a year after it was passed. For more on this, see Eleanor Newbigin, ‘The Hindu Code Bill and the making of the modern Indian state’, Unpublished thesis, University of Cambridge (2008), pp. 92–99.
58 Chatterjee, Partha, ‘The resolution of the women's question’ in Sangari, K. & Vaid, S. (eds), Recasting women: essays in colonial history (Kali for Women, Delhi, 1989), pp. 233–253Google Scholar.
59 This movement from a hierarchical to a more horizontal structure of patriarchal authority was also mirrored in the land reforms passed by the independence state in the 1950s. The hierarchical structure of the zamindari system had secured the power of a single, propertied male over subordinate male and female cultivators. Reforms in the 1950s replaced this structure with one that took the nuclear family, consisting of a single male cultivator, his wife and children, as the basic unit of land-holding. Eleanor Newbigin, ‘The Hindu Code Bill and the making of the modern Indian state’, chapter 6.
- 11
- Cited by