Nurturing resistance : agency and activism of women tea plantation workers in a gendered space
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Abstract
This thesis offers an analysis of labour relations and social space in the
tea gardens of north-east India. Existing literature provides us with an
understanding of how the plantations operate as economic spaces, but in
so doing they treat workers as undifferentiated economic beings defined
only by their class identity. Space, however, has to be animated to be
meaningful. Through participant observation and semi-structured
interviews I explore the plantations as actual lived spaces where people
are bound by and resist constraints. Multiple intersecting identities play
out within these social spaces making them ethnic, religious, and caste
spaces in addition to being gendered. Focusing on these intersectional
identities, I demonstrate how region, ethnicity, party affiliation, caste,
religion are played out and how they are invoked at certain points by the
women workers. The articulations of identity not only determine a sense
of belonging or non-belonging to a space but also how one belongs.
Within the physical sites of the plantation, I examine how the women
perceive these spaces and how, in moving between ideas of home/world,
public/private, these very binaries are negated. The strict sexual division
of labour primarily in the workplace but also in the household and
villages inscribe the physical sites with certain gendered meanings and
performances. The women negotiate these in their everyday lives and
shape these spaces even as they are shaped by them. Conditioned by
gender norms and the resultant hierarchy their narratives can be read as
stories of deprivation and misery, but looking deeper their agency can
also be uncovered. The lives of my research participants show how the
social spaces within which they operate are not static; in spite of spatial
controls there are the many minute acts of resistance through which the
women work the existing restraints to their least disadvantage. Focussing
on the minute acts of insubordination, deceit and even confrontation I
elucidate how the women made use of the relations of subordination to
pave spaces of resistance and sometimes even of autonomy. Furthermore,
not all acts of agency are minute or unspectacular. I map instances of
highly visible, volatile and aggressive protests apparently challenging the
accepted social codes within which they function. In expressing
themselves, the women use the available political repertories of protest in
forms of strikes, blockades, street plays, etc. Through these instances of
activism they appropriate and become visible in the public realm and
challenge the accepted ways in which social spaces and norms play out.
Despite their articulate nature, these protests usually seek to address
immediate demands and do not escalate into social movements. Also
while volatile in action, the protests seek legitimacy within the accepted
gender codes that operate in their everyday life in the plantation.
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