Affiliation:
1. Wolfson College Oxford University
2. Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies Geneva
Abstract
AbstractIn a poor neighborhood of Delhi, women try to cope with unemployment among male breadwinners, and in so doing they often frame their practices as a way of passing time. From the long wait at service points to contentious involvements in work and politics, they depict a host of different and seemingly contradictory activities as meaningless idleness. My analysis of these discourses uncovers a wider pattern of minimizing in which women sometimes internalize and sometimes quietly oppose the constraints that limit what they can do with their time. In a gender landscape where public waiting has usually been associated with men destabilized by a lack of opportunities, women's conversations about lost time become a playing field for alienation, resilience, and subversion, even as the practices that hide underneath allow us a glance into their untold public involvements.
Funder
London School of Economics and Political Science
Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung
Cited by
2 articles.
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