Prayers, Not Protests: Christian Internationalism and Young Womanhood in South India
Material type:
- 0085-6401
Item type | Current library | Vol info | Status | Barcode | |
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Dr VKRV Rao Library | Vol. 46, No. 6 | Not for loan | AI306 |
Protestant communities in South India were vocal in dissenting against colonial rule and in expressing their discomfort with the demographic politics of nationalist discourse. Within this context, this paper focuses on young Christian women in Madras, who, in the 1930s and 1940s, articulated an internationalist ethic and a geography of ecumenical belonging that drew on their positioning within internationalist humanitarian, Christian socialist and global student Christian networks. Critiquing the narrowly regional and national geographies within which minoritised communities in South Asia have tended to be studied, I argue that these young women drew on social gospel theology to imagine an expansive international geography of social action, while critiquing their positioning as minorities' within the emergent Indian nation.
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