Abhilasha Jain | Jawaharlal Nehru University (original) (raw)
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Papers by Abhilasha Jain
This paper is a review of articles and books namely Tanika Sarkar (2003) and Lata Mani (1998), Ve... more This paper is a review of articles and books namely
Tanika Sarkar (2003) and Lata Mani (1998), Veena Das (2006), Uma Chakravarti’s book, Gendering Caste (1998) and Soibam Haripriya’s article (2012) in the North-Eastern Quarterly. The review seeks to trace the concept of sexuality in all these texts, all done through keeping in mind Foucault's work, especially History of Sexuality, Vol. 1
This paper examines the links between labour systems and organisations and women's oppression in ... more This paper examines the links between labour systems and organisations and women's oppression in the below given articles. This analysis was carried out keeping in mind the framework of Marxist, Materialist, Socialist and Radical feminism and their work on sexual division of labour, domestic labour debates, social reproduction approach and unpaid labour. In article(s) where these paradigms do not apply as evidently, an attempt has been made to trace any other frame of theorization that the author may seem to be suggesting. The articles examined are:
This paper is a review of articles and books namely Tanika Sarkar (2003) and Lata Mani (1998), Ve... more This paper is a review of articles and books namely
Tanika Sarkar (2003) and Lata Mani (1998), Veena Das (2006), Uma Chakravarti’s book, Gendering Caste (1998) and Soibam Haripriya’s article (2012) in the North-Eastern Quarterly. The review seeks to trace the concept of sexuality in all these texts, all done through keeping in mind Foucault's work, especially History of Sexuality, Vol. 1
This paper examines the links between labour systems and organisations and women's oppression in ... more This paper examines the links between labour systems and organisations and women's oppression in the below given articles. This analysis was carried out keeping in mind the framework of Marxist, Materialist, Socialist and Radical feminism and their work on sexual division of labour, domestic labour debates, social reproduction approach and unpaid labour. In article(s) where these paradigms do not apply as evidently, an attempt has been made to trace any other frame of theorization that the author may seem to be suggesting. The articles examined are: