Gendering Nations: Martial Man and Chaste Woman
By (Author) Sikata Banerjee
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
13th November 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
250
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
In this book, muscular nationalisma specific intersection of armed masculinity and nationexplores the manner in which nations are gendered. This view of nation relies on a martial man who protects the nation and the chaste woman who both reflects national honor and provides a moral ideal for proper womanhood in the nation. The book draws on secondary literature, cultural expressions encompassing film and social media, and public spectacles (i.e. sporting events, independence day celebrations, and cultural events to celebrate national unity) to argue that muscular nationalism, with some cultural variation, is a dominant global interpretation of nation. The empirical evidence will be drawn from a variety of national contexts (representing the major continents of the world) and shaped by a range of colonial experiences: settler colonialism, extractive colonialism, and those that were not directly colonized.
Sikata Banerjee is a professor of gender studies at the University of Victoria, Canada. Her work focuses on gender and nationalism in India.