The essays in this volume look at how gendered demands for both temporal and spatial access are articulated within specific spaces. The essays look at such questions as, how do categories such as 'time' and 'space' intersect with each other in complementary and contradictory ways? In order to find tangible forms, do such articulations look for alternative 'spaces' themselves? Can digital space, for example, be described as an 'alternative space' within which a certain generation of young feminists has politically come of age in the post-liberalisation era?
The volume attempts to provide commentaries and theorisations of the fact that in recent years, as we have witnessed in India, the emergence of a new feminist subjectivity. Such a phenomenon is also accompanied by the growth of a new female subject, within which the fulcrum of this new feminist subjectivity primarily rests. Predominantly urban, predominantly over-educated, Hindu, upper-caste and upper middle class, this new female (and feminist) subjectivity demands rigorous theorisation.Mulan is the older sister who is clumsy, not necessarily pretty, and quite overshadowed by her little sister who is both graceful and beautiful. She used to tease her little sister for claiming a mythological spider was hunting her, but that was before it caught her. With her little sister's life depending on her and the magical healer rabbit in the moon finding the herbs needed for an antidote, Mulan realizes her clumsiness...
1Report