Gender, Women and the Indian Emergency, 1975-1977

ebook Routledge Studies in Modern History

By Gemma Scott

cover image of Gender, Women and the Indian Emergency, 1975-1977

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India's State of Emergency (1975-1977) is one of the most controversial moments in the country's history since independence. During this infamous 21-month period, Indira Gandhi's government suspended constitutional rights, postponed elections, censored the press and arrested opposition, as well as instituting aggressive slum clearance and coercive sterilisation campaigns. Over the last 20 years, this period has received increasing scholarly attention. But the role that women played in shaping Emergency politics, their experiences of its repressive measures, and their roles in resisting them have not been considered in this scholarship.

Gender, Women and the Indian Emergency, 1975-1977 addresses this gap, as the first major study of the role of women and gender in shaping these events. Drawing on doctoral research and new data, this book documents the many ways in which women and gender were integral to the regime's articulation and implementation. It reveals new insights into women's experiences of Emergency measures and examines their participation in anti-Emergency activism, bringing previously untold histories to light. In doing so, it fundamentally re-shapes our understandings of this period.

Gender, Women and the Indian Emergency, 1975-1977