“Hairdressing a Vernacular: Women, Grammar, and Discipline in Colonial Western India,” Madhura Damle

Dr. Madhura Damle
November 22, 2024
9:00AM - 10:30AM
Live Streamed via Zoom

Date Range
2024-11-22 09:00:00 2024-11-22 10:30:00 “Hairdressing a Vernacular: Women, Grammar, and Discipline in Colonial Western India,” Madhura Damle RegistrationDr. Madhura Damle, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Presidency University, Kolkata, India, will present on “Hairdressing a Vernacular: Women, Grammar, and Discipline in Colonial Western India.” A nineteenth-century South Asian grammarian remarked that the vernacular language, for which he was composing a grammar, ought to be “disentangled with the comb of grammar.” Taking a cue from this metaphor, the presentation will delineate how the process of standardizing vernacular languages in colonial South Asia intersected with contemporary efforts to shape women into “ideal ladies.” The focus of the presentation is the Marathi-speaking regions of western India.This event is part of the “Intimacy, Intersectionality, Identity: Gender, Empire, and Everyday Lives” Series. Live Streamed via Zoom America/New_York public

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Dr. Madhura Damle, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Presidency University, Kolkata, India, will present on “Hairdressing a Vernacular: Women, Grammar, and Discipline in Colonial Western India.” A nineteenth-century South Asian grammarian remarked that the vernacular language, for which he was composing a grammar, ought to be “disentangled with the comb of grammar.” Taking a cue from this metaphor, the presentation will delineate how the process of standardizing vernacular languages in colonial South Asia intersected with contemporary efforts to shape women into “ideal ladies.” The focus of the presentation is the Marathi-speaking regions of western India.

This event is part of the “Intimacy, Intersectionality, Identity: Gender, Empire, and Everyday Lives” Series.