Uma Chakravarti

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Uma Chakravarti
University of Delhi
Notable works
  • Social Dimensions of Early Buddhism
  • Rewriting History: The Life and Times of Pandita Ramabai

Uma Chakravarti (born 20 August 1941) is an Indian

ancient
and 19th century India.

Born to a bureaucrat from

Miranda House, University of Delhi
, where she taught from 1966 to 1998. She published her first book—Social Dimensions of Early Buddhism as a part of her doctorate study in 1987. Her subsequent writings, the most successful of which are Rewriting History: The Life and Times of Pandita Ramabai (1998) and Gendering Caste through a Feminist Lens (2002), have been well received by both the audience and fellow academicians.

A leading scholar of women's and feminist history writing in subcontinent, she has been called the founding mother of the women's movement in India. Apart from engaging with feminist issues, she has also worked as a democratic rights activist, participating in several fact-finding committees including the International Tribunal on Justice for Gujarat.[1][2] She also writes newspaper columns on contemporary issues concerning women and human rights.

Chakravarti has also directed four documentary films—A Quiet Little Entry, Fragments of a Past, Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya: Lucknow 1920-1949, and Prison Diaries, all of which focus on, among other issues, women's history in India.

Early life

Uma Chakravarti was born in Delhi on 20 August 1941.

Benaras Hindu University.[3]

Career

Chakravarti joined the Miranda House, the premier women's college in Delhi University, in 1966.[4] She worked there till 1988, working on Buddhism, early Indian history, the 19th century history and contemporary issues. She authored 7 books and over 50 research articles.[1][2]

Since the 1970s, Chakravarti has been associated with the women's movement and the movement for democratic rights. She participated in several fact-finding teams to investigate human rights violations, communal riots and state repression.[1]

In most recent work, she has directed two films, one on the life of a child bride Subbulakshmi who went on to participate in the Indian independence movement and the second on the writer Mythili Sivaraman who worked with labouring men and women, documenting their oppressions.[3][5]

Jawaharlal Nehru University historian Kumkum Roy has edited a volume of scholarly essays in Chakravarti's honour, stating that she had inspired generations of teachers, students and friends.[6] Ashley Tellis from City University of New York adds that she had a profound influence on the lives and careers of scores of young scholars and activists, playing the role of a `founding mother' of Indian feminist history-writing as well as the Indian women's movement.[7]

Personal life

Uma is married to Anand Chakravarti, a sociologist. Together they have a daughter Upali and son Siddhartha. She lives in Delhi along with her husband and daughter.[3]

Works

Books
Selected articles
Films
  • A Quiet Little Entry
  • Fragments of a Past

Reception

Chakravarti's Social Dimensions of Early Buddhism, based on her doctoral thesis,

Pali, the language spoken by the commoners in early India, ... In her later work, she built on this research to reformulate the issues of social stratification, labour, renunciation and domesticity in early India, with a firm focus on gender, caste and class.[7]

Everyday Lives, Everyday Histories is a compilation of 14 essays derived from three decades of work on the history of early India, previously published in various journals and collections. Scholar Shonaleeka Kaul states that the anthology still retains freshness because it represents a "new take on early Indian history," presenting an understanding of the past beyond the vantage of the elite and the orthodox (the "Kings and Brahmanas"). It is the history of the people on the "margins," where margins is translated as "labouring groups including women who labour and women as a wider category."[8] The Introductory chapter offers an account of Chakravarti's own journey through the women's movement as well as her production of India's first feminism-informed histories.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c Dr Uma Chakravarti (bio) Archived 29 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Leiden University, retrieved 2015-12-11.
  2. ^ a b WGST Visiting Scholar: Uma Chakravarti Archived 10 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Drew University, 22 October 2012, retrieved 2015-12-15.
  3. ^ a b c d Dutta, Julia (10 November 2013). "Julia's Blog: Uma Chakravarti, a larger than life picture". Julia's Blog. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
  4. ^ Chakravarti 2014.
  5. ^ Kumkum Roy, Insights and Interventions 2011, p. 13-14.
  6. ^ Kumkum Roy, Insights and Interventions 2011, cover leaf.
  7. ^
    JSTOR 27644220
  8. ^ a b Kaul, Shonaleeka (18 November 2006), "Peopling history", Frontline, vol. 23, no. 23
  9. ^ Kumkum Roy, Insights and Interventions 2011, p. 1.

Sources

Further reading

  • Baxi, Pratiksha, Uma Chakravarti, Suman Bisht and Janaki Abraham (2008) "Reclaiming Spaces: Gender Politics on a University Campus," In Radhika Coomaraswamy and Nimanthi Perera-Rajasingham (eds) Constellations of Violence: Feminist Interventions in South Asia. Women Unlimited, Delhi.

External links