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“Network not Paperwork”: Political Parties, the Malkin, and Political Matronage in Western India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2016

Tarini Bedi*
Affiliation:
University of Illinois

Extract

I heard Durva, a fearless leader in the Indian political party, Shiv Sena (Shivaji's Army) repeat this poetic refrain in many of her public speeches. She invariably received rousing applause and breathless admiration from the audiences she addressed. Many junior party workers and female constituents who listened in awe at the large women's rallies she organized around the elections began to repeat this in their own lives and in their political campaigns; and Durva's leadership style and the words uttered by her sharp but poetic and charismatic tongue traveled across the district helping the political careers and the self-confidence of many junior political hopefuls. It also brought hordes of new political constituents into the party's fold. Many of her constituents at these events, admitted me that “[Durva] is the malkin [landlady)] of us all.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Women and Politics Research Section of the American Political Science Association 2016 

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