UGC Approved Journal no 63975(19)
New UGC Peer-Reviewed Rules

ISSN: 2349-5162 | ESTD Year : 2014
Volume 12 | Issue 10 | October 2025

JETIREXPLORE- Search Thousands of research papers



WhatsApp Contact
Click Here

Published in:

Volume 12 Issue 8
August-2025
eISSN: 2349-5162

UGC and ISSN approved 7.95 impact factor UGC Approved Journal no 63975

7.95 impact factor calculated by Google scholar

Unique Identifier

Published Paper ID:
JETIR2508563


Registration ID:
568710

Page Number

f469-f475

Share This Article


Jetir RMS

Title

Feminist Theory and Dalit Women's Writings: A New Politics of Voice

Authors

Abstract

In Indian literature, the emergence of Dalit women's voices has significantly reshaped the contours of feminist discourse. These writers challenge the limitations of mainstream Indian feminism, which often tends to universalize women's experiences and overlook the layered oppressions faced by Dalit women due to their caste, gender, and class. Dalit feminism asserts a distinct standpoint that foregrounds the lived realities of those who are doubly marginalized—both as women and as members of oppressed castes. This critique becomes evident in the works of influential writers such as Bama, Baby Kamble, and Urmila Pawar, whose narratives delve into personal and collective histories of suffering, resistance, and resilience. Their stories do not merely recount oppression; they powerfully reclaim agency through language, memory, and community. For instance, Bama’s Karukku narrates her journey from shame to empowerment as a Dalit Christian woman, exposing the hypocrisy within religious and educational institutions. Similarly, Baby Kamble’s The Prisons We Broke offers a raw and unapologetic portrayal of untouchability and gendered subjugation. These texts challenge the upper-caste, upper-class assumptions embedded in mainstream feminist thought and propose a more inclusive, intersectional approach. By placing Dalit women's experiences at the center, Dalit literature enriches feminist theory, making it more responsive to caste-based discrimination. This integration redefines feminist praxis — no longer a singular narrative, but a coalition of diverse struggles. Thus, Dalit women’s literature is not only a mode of resistance but also a transformative framework that compels Indian feminism to confront its exclusions.

Key Words

Feminist discourse, mainstream feminist, untouchability, subjugation, discrimination, transformative framework, feminist praxis

Cite This Article

"Feminist Theory and Dalit Women's Writings: A New Politics of Voice", International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research (www.jetir.org), ISSN:2349-5162, Vol.12, Issue 8, page no.f469-f475, August-2025, Available :http://www.jetir.org/papers/JETIR2508563.pdf

ISSN


2349-5162 | Impact Factor 7.95 Calculate by Google Scholar

An International Scholarly Open Access Journal, Peer-Reviewed, Refereed Journal Impact Factor 7.95 Calculate by Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool, Multidisciplinary, Monthly, Multilanguage Journal Indexing in All Major Database & Metadata, Citation Generator

Cite This Article

"Feminist Theory and Dalit Women's Writings: A New Politics of Voice", International Journal of Emerging Technologies and Innovative Research (www.jetir.org | UGC and issn Approved), ISSN:2349-5162, Vol.12, Issue 8, page no. ppf469-f475, August-2025, Available at : http://www.jetir.org/papers/JETIR2508563.pdf

Publication Details

Published Paper ID: JETIR2508563
Registration ID: 568710
Published In: Volume 12 | Issue 8 | Year August-2025
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): https://doi.org/10.56975/jetir.v12i8.568710
Page No: f469-f475
Country: Bodhgaya, Bihar, India .
Area: Arts
ISSN Number: 2349-5162
Publisher: IJ Publication


Preview This Article


Downlaod

Click here for Article Preview

Download PDF

Downloads

000191

Print This Page

Current Call For Paper

Jetir RMS