The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics

This paper studies the representations of lower-caste Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore and how they were implicated in gender politics from the late nineteenth century up until the 1990s postwar period. It reveals how the introduction of ‘new patriarchy’ by Indian reformists as an answer to resol...

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Main Author: Al-Mehraaj Binte Mohamed Rahim
Other Authors: Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173595
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1735952024-03-07T08:52:06Z The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics Al-Mehraaj Binte Mohamed Rahim Jessica Bridgette Hinchy School of Humanities JHinchy@ntu.edu.sg Arts and Humanities This paper studies the representations of lower-caste Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore and how they were implicated in gender politics from the late nineteenth century up until the 1990s postwar period. It reveals how the introduction of ‘new patriarchy’ by Indian reformists as an answer to resolve the Women’s Question of the nineteenth century set the path for the ways lower-caste women’s identities were to be constructed for most of the colonial period, implicating them in various kinds of gender politics that predicated sexuality and domesticity as preliminary sites of struggle. Drawing on critical discourse analysis of women’s sexuality, domesticity and gender roles, the thesis argues that the perceived identities of lower-caste Tamil women of Singapore and Malaya – that consisted largely of sexual governance and gender politicisation – were distinctly shaped by transnational politics of caste, class, race and nationalist politics stoking particular systems of patriarchy that emerged over the period of the nineteenth century. This not only led to the production of distorted and definitive constructs of lower-caste Tamil women in colonial, national and cultural consciousness, but also worked to exclude the lower-caste Tamil women from elite and upper-caste models of womanhood over the course of the colonial period. Having been marginalised, these women were conferred the opportunity to attain cultural superiority and ideological strength and thereby regain respectability during instances of embracing domestic femininity following the period of the 1930s. The study attempts to provide a multifarious account of the representations of Tamil women by threading perspectives of colonial officials, European commentators, Indian reformists and nationalists, journalists, mercenaries and novelists and thus digs deep into productions of knowledge that reveal identity constructions that took place through gender politicisation. The thesis makes a timely contribution to the scholarship on the history of Tamil women in British Malaya and Singapore and demonstrates the potential of using gender as a category of analysis in South Asian diaspora studies. Master's degree 2024-02-19T00:09:12Z 2024-02-19T00:09:12Z 2023 Thesis-Master by Research Al-Mehraaj Binte Mohamed Rahim (2023). The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173595 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173595 10.32657/10356/173595 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle Arts and Humanities
Al-Mehraaj Binte Mohamed Rahim
The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics
description This paper studies the representations of lower-caste Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore and how they were implicated in gender politics from the late nineteenth century up until the 1990s postwar period. It reveals how the introduction of ‘new patriarchy’ by Indian reformists as an answer to resolve the Women’s Question of the nineteenth century set the path for the ways lower-caste women’s identities were to be constructed for most of the colonial period, implicating them in various kinds of gender politics that predicated sexuality and domesticity as preliminary sites of struggle. Drawing on critical discourse analysis of women’s sexuality, domesticity and gender roles, the thesis argues that the perceived identities of lower-caste Tamil women of Singapore and Malaya – that consisted largely of sexual governance and gender politicisation – were distinctly shaped by transnational politics of caste, class, race and nationalist politics stoking particular systems of patriarchy that emerged over the period of the nineteenth century. This not only led to the production of distorted and definitive constructs of lower-caste Tamil women in colonial, national and cultural consciousness, but also worked to exclude the lower-caste Tamil women from elite and upper-caste models of womanhood over the course of the colonial period. Having been marginalised, these women were conferred the opportunity to attain cultural superiority and ideological strength and thereby regain respectability during instances of embracing domestic femininity following the period of the 1930s. The study attempts to provide a multifarious account of the representations of Tamil women by threading perspectives of colonial officials, European commentators, Indian reformists and nationalists, journalists, mercenaries and novelists and thus digs deep into productions of knowledge that reveal identity constructions that took place through gender politicisation. The thesis makes a timely contribution to the scholarship on the history of Tamil women in British Malaya and Singapore and demonstrates the potential of using gender as a category of analysis in South Asian diaspora studies.
author2 Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
author_facet Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
Al-Mehraaj Binte Mohamed Rahim
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Al-Mehraaj Binte Mohamed Rahim
author_sort Al-Mehraaj Binte Mohamed Rahim
title The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics
title_short The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics
title_full The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics
title_fullStr The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics
title_full_unstemmed The history of Tamil women in Malaya and Singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste Tamil women's representations and gender politics
title_sort history of tamil women in malaya and singapore (1870s-1990s): a study of lower-caste tamil women's representations and gender politics
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/173595
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