Death before birth: negotiating reproduction, female infanticide and sex selective abortion in Tamil Nadu, South India
dc.contributor.author
Perwez, Mohammad Shahid.
en
dc.date.accessioned
2013-06-26T13:48:03Z
dc.date.available
2013-06-26T13:48:03Z
dc.date.issued
2009
dc.description.abstract
This thesis deals with the cultural and political underpinnings of female infanticide
and sex selective abortion in contemporary South India. Based on a fifteen months'
ethnographic fieldwork in western parts of Salem district in Tamil Nadu, I explore
the ideas and practices around deaths of (un)born children - particularly in the
context of issues of gender-selective child survival, use and control over new
reproductive technologies for sex selection, fertility and reproduction. Elucidating
further the ethnographic contexts of state and non-state (primarily NGO)
interventions in these deaths, the thesis examines the new forms of governance on
issues that affect contemporary Tamil women. I discuss three different discourses by
the government, by NGOs, and by the communities on the meaning and context of
these deaths including the ways in which these meanings and ideas are reconceptualised
and re-configured into a changing social and cultural context of birth.
My thesis, therefore, contributes to the anthropology of reproduction.
The underlying questions of the thesis are: Why has female infanticide, which was
claimed to be effectively controlled in nineteenth century colonial India, appeared in
post-colonial (South) India - in the form of both sex selective abortion and female
infanticide - in communities and regions where it was previously claimed to be
unknown? What effects could these social practices have on contemporary women' s
positions and their developments and vice-versa? In answering these questions. the
thesis makes a significant departure from previous anthropological studies on female
infanticide in India in that it does not solely look into one single unit (village/s in this
case), but uses a multi-sited approach, covering a wider geographical area, i.e .. parts
of Salem, Dharmapuri, and Erode districts of Tamil Nadu. The thesis also shifts from
the purely demographic approach to female infanticide in that it does not generate a
new data set on female infanticide. Rather, it engages with the institutional responses
and their rhetoric on female infanticide and sex selective abortion.
en
dc.identifier.other
538436
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/7198
dc.language.iso
eng
dc.publisher
University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
Sociology
en
dc.subject
Human
en
dc.title
Death before birth: negotiating reproduction, female infanticide and sex selective abortion in Tamil Nadu, South India
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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