Women, Land and Moral Justice in Late Colonial India Peasant Voices from the Himalayas

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Critical Perspectives in South Asian History

Women, Land and Moral Justice in Late Colonial India

Peasant Voices from the Himalayas

Rashmi Pant | Janaki Nair | Mrinalini Sinha | Shabnum Tejani

History / Asia / South / India

This book, set in Kumaon and Garhwal in late colonial India, reconstructs the moral world of peasant women who transmitted ancestral property in defiance of a legal regime that only recognised patrilineal inheritance. Appealing to the concept of parvarish ('providing for') in Hindu law, these women invoked a moral economy and norms of obligation, reciprocity and loyalty to reconfigure their household structure and ensure care and labour in exchange for property from the late 19th century onwards.

Arguing that this historical practice clearly demonstrates non-elite women's agency during this period, the book taps into hitherto untapped regional archival material such as gift deeds, community-brokered agreements and litigant depositions to highlight the importance of familial obligations in peasant culture. In doing so, Women, Land and Moral Justice in Late Colonial India brings together colonial, gender and legal histories to provide a story of women creating a third way, one that allowed them to reject patriarchal norms in practice, defy colonial law and reclaim control of their households.

Rashmi Pant is Associate Professor of History at the Indraprastha College for Women, University of Delhi, India.

Publication Date: 04 February 2027
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN-13: 9781350637955
Format: Hardback
Page Count: 256
Weight (oz): 16.0

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