Discipline;
Indian government;
Partition;
political activism;
reconstruction;
social service;
social work;
women;
REPRESENTATION;
CITIZENSHIP;
IDENTITY;
D O I:
10.1080/00856401.2021.1883269
中图分类号:
K9 [地理];
学科分类号:
0705 ;
摘要:
This article considers social service work as a vector from which elite and middle-class Indian women claimed gendered citizenship during the 1940s and 1950s. The article highlights the ways in which these women emphasised social service work as a way to create visibility for themselves, while obscuring the labour of other women whom they claimed as clients. The article also traces the professionalisation of social work through the 1950s, a move which undermined these women's claims to representative power and political visibility based on their social work.
机构:
Morehead State Univ, Dept Sociol Social Work & Criminol, Morehead, KY 40351 USAMorehead State Univ, Dept Sociol Social Work & Criminol, Morehead, KY 40351 USA