Archive for the ‘Gender’ Category
Counting down!
Posted by Johanna in Anthropology, Gender, India on april 13th, 2010
Desi Girls means Indian girls and this documentary portrays how three young college girls in Delhi look upon gender in their society and in their lives.
To approach the topic of gender, anthropologist Johanna Sommansson spent two months in Delhi at the end of 2008. The research resaulted in a master’s dissertation as well as this documentary.
The girls in the film are all college students in an interesting phase of transition; being young, educated, and of marriageable age. Being a Desi girl is a paradox: on the one hand, they want to be good girls – subservient, humble and obedient. However, on the other hand they are negotiating and challenging the normative behaviour: finding their own identities among the pre-set rules of how to be a good girl in a city unsafe for women.
A documentary by Johanna Sommansson, faithful India traveller and researcher.
Desi Girls premier!
The date, time and place is set!
All are welcome, free entry!
Date: 21 april 2010
Time: 18.30
Place: Haninge Kulturhus, Handen
About the film:
Desi Girls means Indian girls and this documentary constructs a portrait of how three young college girls in Delhi look upon gender in their society and in their lives.
To approach the topic of gender Anthropologist Johanna Sommansson spent two months in Delhi at the end of 2008. The research resaulted in a Masters dissertation as well as this documentary.
The girls in the film are all college students in an interesting phase of transition; being young, educated and of marriageable age. Being a Desi girl is a paradox: on one hand they want to be good girls – subservient, humble and obedient. But on the other hand they are negotiating and challenging the normative behaviour, finding their own identities among the pre-set rules of how to be a good girl in a city unsafe for women.
A made film by Johanna Sommansson, faithful India traveller and researcher.
Being a Girl in Delhi
My recently started film project is coming to shape! I am at moment working out the themes from my material. The girls are so vivid talkative and spontaneous in the interviews that I am so happy about their contribution in my film! It will be a documentary which portrays how 3 Delhi girls look upon their lives, their future and their position as women in Indian society. At the moment I am am dividing the vast material into 5 thematically different though connected parts.
2) Life in Delhi
3) Eveteasing
4) Indian parents
5) Indian marriage
Eveteasing is an act commonly defined in Indian media, guidebooks and by my informants as men harassing women in the street or on the public transport. An eveteaser stand close to the woman and ‘accidentally’ touches the woman’s hips, breast, bottom, or even her vagina at times. It is also includes verbally comments of sexual character, staring and comments on girls appearances. To bring more light into the issue of eveteasing, watch the video material from News Chanel Aaj Tak and the Jagori “Safe Delhi” ad on You Tube.
Desi Girls – MA thesis available
Posted by Johanna in Anthropology, Gender, India on november 10th, 2009
My MA dissertation on Delhi girls “Desi Girls – a stydy of young urban middle class girls’ expressions and negotiations of gender” is now to be found online, feel free to download and spread! Thank you.
Just click on this link, and you need to search for the title Desi girls in the first field.
Abstract:
This thesis attempts to understand how gender is expressed and negotiated in the everyday lives of young urban girls in South Delhi. To approach the topic of gender I engaged in participant observation including semi-structured interviews and spending time with young middle-class girls during two months in Delhi at the end of 2008. The girls I encountered in the field are all college students in a phase of transition; being young, educated and of marriageable age.
In constructing a body of knowledge with a foundation in the theoretical framework of discourse analysis, I illustrate how institutions like marriage, family, societal norms, space, and relations between the sexes are juxtaposed in the area of gender. This thesis reveals how gender identity is constructed not as individual accounts, but as juxtapositions of perspectives of individual agency and manifestations of discourses.
Marriage in Delhi is commonly arranged by the parents and is considered a union in which gender needs to be re-negotiated. Aware of the patriarchal ethos imbuing their society, the informants are preparing for the after-marriage talk. After marriage their individual freedom lies in the hands of their husbands, therefore they intend to negotiate with their husbands-to-be to have a marriage based on equality.
Being a Desi girl is a paradox: on one hand they want to be good girls – subservient, humble and obedient – but on the other hand they are negotiating and challenging the normative behaviour when it comes to issues like marriage, go out pubing, or to talking back to their parents. In this thesis, I investigate the societal femininity discourse and the possible discrepancy between the discourse and the actual behaviour. I have concluded that the concept of negotiation plays a key role in the Delhi girls’ constructions of gender.
Key words: Delhi, Gender, Girls, Middle class, Discourse analysis
Modern day colonialism
Since my previous entry I feel an urge to explain how I apply the concept of colonialism in modern times. I think colonialism has at its core a selfish centre. When selfishness results in taking advantage of less fortunate people I apply the term as a noun “He/she is behaving colonial”. Colonial mindset is widely spread in the globalised world, quoting Mumbai-based psychiatrist Harish Shetty “Anyone in power will target the vulnerable in this globalised world”. This quote is from the article “Mind of a rapist” India today July 6, 2009, where the issue of power in rape-crimes is issued. The article brings out interesting views regarding this particular crime and focus on the power aspect in the act rather than the sexual activity, which I thinks is well written and serious article. So I stress that rapists are colonial in their abuse of power over the less powerful (read poor women) in society.
Globalization n Gender
Posted by Johanna in Gender, Global, Popular culture on september 21st, 2009
I believe that ones own cultural values are more prominent in an information society where the availability of other value systems are easily accessed through the process of globalization, the mobility of goods, services, and people. Gender is today a transnational concept because young women around the world can easily access ideas and perspectives on how women’s ideal looks like, and can look like in other parts of the world through popular culture and cyberspace. Therefore gender-ideals and role-models have become global.
College students all over the world face and to some extent absorb foreign gender expressions by exchange students, the Internet and social media. When we look at representants from the world of popular culture, we can see how they are role-models breaking cultural boundaries. What makes the American actress Angelina Jolie an ideal woman in so many peoples view? I stress that she is a beauty ideal that goes beyond cultural boundaries. I stress that gender ideals as a concept are global transnational phenomenon.

