Wednesday, 15 January 2014

Feminism and the Hindu Woman

“Few societies have been so tamasic, so full of inertia and contentment in increasing narrowness as Indian society in later times; few have been so eager to preserve themselves in inertia. Few therefore have attached so great an importance to authority. ... The result of this well-meaning bondage has been an increasing impoverishment of the Indian intellect, once the most gigantic and original in the world. Hence a certain incapacity, atrophy, impotence have marked our later activities even at their best. The most striking instance is our continued helplessness in the face of the new conditions and new knowledge imposed on us by recent European contact. We have tried to assimilate, we have tried to reject, we have tried to select; but we have not been able to do any of these things successfully.”

This is what Sri Aurobindo wrote a hundred years ago in his essay, “On Original Thinking”. India is now confronting yet another Euro-American movement, that of feminism. 

This is an attempt to evaluate Hindu anthropology in comparison to radical feminism.
 
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Regardless of what international surveys suggest, it is obvious enough that women in India today experience pain, deception and helplessness. The causes include of course social, historical, economic and logistical reasons, but the main culprit is often held to be [the ‘mindset’ of] the Indian male citizen, especially the ‘upper-caste’ Hindu man.
Since this man is held to adhere to tradition (consciously or otherwise), it is supposed that the roots of oppression of women lie in the texts that define/describe the traditions. Gender in Hindu society is considered a polarising factor because of tradition that is imposed on them, thereby obstructing women’s well-being. The young, well-educated, financially independent, socially self-defining, sexually autonomous and consciously modern woman is held to be the epitome of women’s liberation, and women who fail to, do not have the means to or do not desire to achieve any of these are considered to be suppressed, oppressed or repressed. Manifest features of the traditional lifestyle are considered to be symptomatic of the unenlightened woman: joint family structure, being a homemaker, subservience to the husband etc.
There are three assertions of misogyny made in connection with the traditional Hindu perspective on women. Firstly, that the tradition has an incorrect view of the nature of women, that they consider women a major source of pain, danger, risk, conflict or evil tout court, that their intellectual and spiritual capacities are considered to be significantly lesser than those of men and that women are to be respected only as virtuous mothers. Secondly, that the norms that it imposes on women are rooted in men’s own interests to maintain domination over women, and that even when there are concessions (property rights for instance) made it is out of a paternalistic concern. Thirdly, that traditional thinking is unwilling to consider women as individuals who have inalienable natural rights and who are equal to men.
A man is always looking to violate what his woman expects from him -- men can be a real pain!
Men are like the most disgusting people around. In fact they're the real problem with society. I’m sure you know what I'm talking about. They may have beautiful wives, well-respected and accomplished, wives who keep their promises and never even think of betraying the man in their life, but these men are ready to do away with them if they get the chance.
This is a serious problem with men. Not having any sense of shame, they go on from one woman to another, even if she is a total loser. They'll entertain any woman who’s nice to them, who'll serve them even a tiny little bit. It's usually only if they don't get any attention from women or if they're afraid of social consequences that they stay put in monogamy mode. Men can't control themselves, that's just how they are.
This is not exactly written by a woman, but it is not too far off from what women do in fact publicly complain about these days. These are the words of the Apsarā Pañcacūḍā except that “women” and “husbands” are changed to “men” and “wives”. Now how many voices of modernity will resist the temptation to take the original dialogue (from the Anuśāsana Parva) as suggestive of a misogynist culture while wryly writing off the passage above as a woman’s personal lament?
Several such assertions, by both men and women, of women’s weakness of mind (due to being especially prone to the vagaries of desire), of their dubious intentions and unreasonable ambitions and of their lack of hesitation in deserting or causing pain to men, can be found in the epic literature. These are rants of men who have, if we take their word, experienced disappointment in their interactions with women, quite possibly due to their own error. In addition, they are seen to complain that women cannot be controlled and that their behaviour is unintelligible to them such that even Brahma seems not to be able to figure it out. (In one such curious dialogue, an embittered Yudhiṣṭhira even claims political science to have evolved from the observations of feminine behaviour.)
This discourse of blame and banter can also be found in the case of Brahma-Kṣatra citizens who fail to fulfill their obligations to the state and instead waste themselves away to vice or misuse their power to serve vested interests. It is quite likely that this discourse reflects the commission of such violations on the part of the accused. It is evident that they had the freedom to commit these acts in the first place and also that they frequently got away with them – although there are many punitive measures laid down in codified law, there is less evidence that such measures were taken, thence the resort to tactics of shame and slander. It is thus likelier that women had ‘too much’ freedom and were not treated harshly upon failing to satisfy what men expected of them than that these judgmental remarks of fear (of the ‘mantra-like charm’ of women, for instance) and disdain (of the power they wield by their ‘beauty, blessedness and youth’) indicate harassment of women who chose not to conform.
The idea of weakness of mind and intellect on the part of women also finds expression in similar dialogues, although most of the tradition’s well-known women are anything but weak. According to many of the men in the great epic, woman, declared beforehand by Bhīṣma to be at the ‘root of all evil’, is said to be undeserving of independence and to be born due to demerit. She is said to be barred from studying the Śruti, such that the Itihāsa-Purāṇa literature is advertised as a Veda composed expressly for the instruction and leisure of citizens other than the male Brahma-Kṣatra citizenry. It is opined that women should occupy themselves with duties of the household and be devoted to their husbands and that their well-being comprises only and exactly this, just as that of the student is in academic pursuits and devotion to the teacher.
These duties and obligations are identified as socially constructed. They are created, as Umā tells her husband (in Nārada’s account), just when a woman commits to marriage. There have been, moreover, two creations of women. The first woman is said to be virtuous, while it is in the second creation that sensuality and weakness was implanted into women. This is consistently explicated by two accounts, the older one of Indra managing the backlash of Brahminicide by getting Apsarā-s (symbolising feminine sexuality) to accept a share, and that of Prajāpati stirring troublesome passions in the ‘new’ women after being pleaded by the deities together to stop humanity from ascending to their greatness.
In the context of law, Yama, a Dharmaśāstra authority of greater antiquity, mentions that in a former age women and men were together educated in the same manner. Hārita, a later author, describes two types of contemporary women: Sadyovadhu-s and Brahmavādinī-s. The latter pursue the same path of education as do men and may choose not to marry and pursue asceticism. This is evidence of women’s intellectual and spiritual abilities being considered equal to those of men in a not greater measure than expression of contempt is considered to amount to proof of misogyny. There has of course also been a utilitarian strain in the advocacy of women’s education: the contradiction inherent in the bracketing together of women and Śūdra-s is recognized and women are recommended academic training and ritual praxis so as to create better Savarṇa citizens. Elsewhere, these ideas were more explicitly developed by Gaius Musonius Rufus of the Stoic tradition.
A narrative in the epic describes the historical emergence of patriarchy. A young Śvetaketu is outraged after his mother is lured by a Brahmin to elope with him. His father attempts to pacify him, saying that women are, according to the eternal Dharma, completely free in their behaviour, and that he should not, therefore, upset the norm. He likens this eternal Dharma (which is “agreeable to women”) to the gender relations among animals. But Śvetaketu proceeds to impose that women shall henceforth be subservient to their husbands and that seducing a willfully married woman be a criminal offence. Pāṇḍu, who narrates this to Kuntī, asserts that patriarchy was thus instituted forcibly by Śvetaketu. Here patriarchy is not justified on grounds of women’s frailty (as Hamlet famously proclaimed), potentially dangerous sexuality (as proposed by Arti Dhand in her Woman as Sage, Woman as Fire) or on grounds of it being necessary to ‘civilisation’ (argued for by Camille Paglia in her Sexual Personae). Au contraire, patriarchy may be said to have emerged more by force of the jealousies and insecurities of men and their incapacity to thwart offending men. Bhīṣma argues to this effect when he says in the Śānti that it is men who are stained with faults and that women cannot have faults at all.
Most of the speculation and commentary in the Mokṣadharmaparva, and also the genre of Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣad-s is self-professedly from a male ascetic’s point of view and does not reflect the methods and practices of female ascetics. It is, however, categorically asserted that the path of renunciation can and needs to be pursued by women equally as men, for enlightenment cannot be gendered. At the time of the Mahābhārata, women are mostly mentioned as wives and mothers and sometimes as ascetics. Women are glorified as mothers but except for discourse appertaining to universal aspects of life (speculations on desire, suffering, rebirth, causality etc.), every individual enters the narrative in a particular capacity and is praised or censured in that capacity. In law, although increasing specificity in instruction is evident (depending on the intersections of class an individual stands on), there is the idea of degrees of generality of moral prescriptions such that truth, compassion, generosity etc. are held to be Sāmānya Dharma that cannot be overridden by any exceptional instruction whatsoever.
The objective here is not to make an apologia for tradition, for if it were so, one would, for instance, be asked to imagine Manu’s indictment as merely an attempt to optimise the ‘natural’ functions of men and women so as to better sustain society, or worse, defend the Strīdharmapaddhatī. Although one can make several more citations of benevolent views on women within the tradition (for which see AS Altekar’s The Position of Women in Hindu Civilization), it is quite obvious that Hindu society was and is still far from being favourable to women. It will prove imperative, for the idea of India to survive and flourish, for Hindu scholars to propose an ‘indigenous’ system of social organization (Pandharinath Prabhu made an early attempt in his Hindu Social Organization) that is conversant with developments in sociobiology, and also to make it appear friendly-to-all (as ‘secular humanism’ and sundry Western imports do) so as to not be impeded by scandalizing on the part of its opponents. The Hindu woman of today has the resources to confidently assert women’s emancipation within the framework of tradition – the intelligent and strong-willed women of the epics will prove to better inspire her than the accusatory theorising of already-privileged Western feminists.
The central point here is that the picture that radical socialist feminism portrays, that of tradition being opposed to women’s emancipation, is an illusion. The suspicions it has regarding tradition are ill-founded and its hope of radical revolution into modernity – which is arguably a religious aspiration -- betrays its misunderstanding of what any tradition is. It has engendered all manner of absurd ideas surrounding gender such as ‘sex wars’.
The overarching question, when it comes to women’s emancipation, seems to be that of identifying the defining characteristics of men and women. It should not be controversial that, on average, men reportedly tend to be systematisers, and women, empathisers, as the research of Simon Baron-Cohen shows. Even if his methodology be flawed, there is enough anecdotal evidence to support the view. It would be more astonishing and more offensive to suggest that women have precisely the same capacities and defects as men do but do not have the achievements that men have to their credit so far because men were oppressing them, for it then leads to the question of why women have been so weak so long.
To posit that it is because of the nature of their physique – whether by inherent weakness of structure or because of the necessity of child-bearing – will give men a major excuse to continue oppressing women. The military has been a starting point for gender-based occupational differentiation, because it is easier to bring a medium-strength male to military fitness level than a high-strength woman who has vowed not to bear children, in turn because the man is less likely to face sexual harassment or socioeconomic pressure to reproduce or to get involved in a relationship with a man in the same troop.
Regardless of which side biostatistics is on (i.e. whether human males and females have the same (dis)abilities on average or not), patriarchy or feminism can still win the day, because neither is especially interested in finding out facts; they are normatively tied to the interests of a particular social group all the while entertaining suspicions regarding its Other. Just as misogynists of bygone eras did not consider it necessary to thoroughly investigate whether or not women were in reality intellectually feeble, feminists today need not concern themselves with empirical studies on gender and sex. Except a few notable promoters of women’s emancipation (e.g. Madhu Kishwar in our times), feminist activism has tended to march from sanity to satiny.
That humans can and willfully do act against what well-established wisdom or even their own personal experience would suggest is nothing new. Now this wisdom usually does not offer any guarantees regarding the future – if feminists today can manage to convince women that they need to be moulded to become what men have been (reducing women to an imitation of men, as Marguerite Yourcenar wrote in Les Yeux ouverts), regardless of how women have been so far and of what they currently desire, then feminism will emerge as victor.
Relations between genders and other social groups are in a constant flux in response to various forces. Intention, good or bad, strong or weak, overt or covert, is itself shaped and directed by these forces. It will prove more productive to concentrate on increasing well-being of women (and of society at large) than to use grouse and guilt to goad the gullible.
Kāla and Śakti dance together but decide their own movements.