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Indian Journal of Gender Studies
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Articles

Poetesses in Classical Sanskrit Literature

7th to 13th Centuries c.e.

Shalini Shah

Shalini Shah is Reader, Department of History, Indraprastha College, University of Delhi, Delhi. E-mail: shalini64_shah{at}rediffmail.com.

This article seeks to render audible the voices of poetesses in classical Sanskrit literature between the 7th and 13th centuries C.E., and to juxtapose these voices with the Paligathas of the Theris, the verses of the Prakrit poetesses as well as the poetry of the Tamil bhaktins. We have argued that while the Sanskrit poetesses were not profes-sional writers, their verses occupy a niche of their own in the corpus of Sanskrit kavya. The poetry of the Sanskrit poetesses belongs to the prema tradition, which stands in contrast to the hegemonic masculine srngari tradition of the rest of the Sanskrit kavya. We have also argued that in spite of the largely feminine concern of bonding with male partners, there is a subversive quality in these voices that makes many of these Sanskrit verses worthy of being treated as female voices with stirrings of feminist consciousness. A close reading of the verses enlightens us about an entire gendered social world inhabited by these Sanskrit poetesses.

Indian Journal of Gender Studies, Vol. 15, No. 1, 1-27 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/097152150701500101


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