Based on extensive fieldwork in Calcutta, this book provides the first ethnography of how middle-class women in India understand and experience economic change through transformations of family life. It explores their ideas, practices and experiences of marriage, childbirth, reproductive change and their children's education, and addresses the impact that globalization is having on the new middle-classes in Asia more generally from a domestic perspective.By focusing on maternity, the book explores subjective understandings of the way intimate relationships and the family are affected by India's liberalization policies and the neo-liberal ideologies that accompany through an analysis of often competing ideologies and multiple practices. And by drawing attention to women's agency as wives, mothers and grandmothers within these new frameworks, "Domestic Goddesses" discusses the experiences of different age groups affected by these changes. Through a careful analysis of women's narratives, the domestic sphere is shown to represent the key site for the remaking of Indian middle-class citizens in a global world.
Author(s): Henrike Donner
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 230
Contents......Page 6
List of Map and Figures......Page 8
Acknowledgements......Page 10
Introduction......Page 16
1 Middle-class Domesticities and Maternities......Page 46
2 Of Love, Marriage and Intimacy......Page 78
3 The Place of Birth......Page 106
4 Education and the Making of Middle-class Mothers......Page 138
5 Motherhood, Food and the Body......Page 170
Conclusion......Page 194
B......Page 198
L......Page 199
S......Page 200
Z......Page 201
Bibliography......Page 202
B......Page 218
C......Page 219
D......Page 220
F......Page 221
G......Page 222
K......Page 223
M......Page 224
O......Page 226
P......Page 227
S......Page 228
V......Page 229
Z......Page 230