Judith Butler on performativity and precarity: exploratory thoughts on gender and violence in India |
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Authors: | Annamma Joy Russell Belk Rishi Bhardwaj |
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Affiliation: | 1. Faculty of Management, The University of British Columbia, Canadaannamma.joy@ubc.ca;3. Schulich School of Business, York University, Canada;4. Faculty of Management, The University of British Columbia, Canada |
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Abstract: | AbstractWe turn to the philosopher and gender theorist Judith Butler for insight into how gender performativity (acting and actions restricted by gender norms) affects identity and thus individual agency. Gender performativity underlies the prevailing conceptualisation of women in India as being lesser. We anticipated that the extreme divide between wealth and poverty and higher and lower castes would affect women’s vulnerability. Yet, while lower class/caste women are undeniably at greater risk of sexual assault, even women of higher social status similarly embody ‘precarity’: a life lived without predictability, and thus without security. While structural changes have encouraged increased agentic performativity among women in India, a culture of condoned sexual violence is nonetheless an ongoing and horrifying reality. |
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Keywords: | performativity precarity sexual violence rape Indian women caste social class gendered habitus |
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