Gods, Gurus, Prophets and the Poor: Exploring Informal, Interfaith Exchanges among Working Class Female Workers in an Indian City

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Gods, Gurus, Prophets and the Poor : Exploring Informal, Interfaith Exchanges among Working Class Female Workers in an Indian City. / Sen, Atreyee.

In: Religions, Vol. 10, No. 9, 531, 17.09.2019, p. 1-13.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sen, A 2019, 'Gods, Gurus, Prophets and the Poor: Exploring Informal, Interfaith Exchanges among Working Class Female Workers in an Indian City', Religions, vol. 10, no. 9, 531, pp. 1-13. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10090531

APA

Sen, A. (2019). Gods, Gurus, Prophets and the Poor: Exploring Informal, Interfaith Exchanges among Working Class Female Workers in an Indian City. Religions, 10(9), 1-13. [531]. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10090531

Vancouver

Sen A. Gods, Gurus, Prophets and the Poor: Exploring Informal, Interfaith Exchanges among Working Class Female Workers in an Indian City. Religions. 2019 Sep 17;10(9):1-13. 531. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel10090531

Author

Sen, Atreyee. / Gods, Gurus, Prophets and the Poor : Exploring Informal, Interfaith Exchanges among Working Class Female Workers in an Indian City. In: Religions. 2019 ; Vol. 10, No. 9. pp. 1-13.

Bibtex

@article{7f984d6c7a9643cdbb30b4a3afcde0bc,
title = "Gods, Gurus, Prophets and the Poor: Exploring Informal, Interfaith Exchanges among Working Class Female Workers in an Indian City",
abstract = "This article revolves around the narratives of Sabita (Muslim), Radha (Hindu) and Sharleen (Christian), migrant women in their mid-forties, who have been working as maids, cooks and cleaners in middle-class housing colonies in Kolkata, a city in eastern India. Informal understandings of gendered oppressions across religious traditions often dominate the conversations of the three working-class women. Like many labourers from slums and lower-class neighbourhoods, they meet and debate religious concerns in informal {\textquoteleft}resting places{\textquoteright} (under a tree, on a park bench, at a tea stall, on a train, at a corner of a railway platform). These anonymous spaces are usually devoid of religious symbols, as well as any moral surveillance of women{\textquoteright}s colloquial abuse of male dominance in society. I show how the anecdotes of struggle, culled across multiple religious practices, intersect with the shared existential realities of these urban workers. They temporarily empower female members of the informal workforce in the city, to create loosely defined gendered solidarities in the face of patriarchal authority, and reflect on daily discrimination against economically marginalised migrant women. I argue that these fleeting urban rituals underline the more vital role of (what I describe as) poor people{\textquoteright}s {\textquoteleft}casual philosophies{\textquoteright}, in enhancing empathy and dialogue between communities that are characterised by political tensions in India.",
author = "Atreyee Sen",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
day = "17",
doi = "10.3390/rel10090531",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "1--13",
journal = "Religions",
issn = "2077-1444",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gods, Gurus, Prophets and the Poor

T2 - Exploring Informal, Interfaith Exchanges among Working Class Female Workers in an Indian City

AU - Sen, Atreyee

PY - 2019/9/17

Y1 - 2019/9/17

N2 - This article revolves around the narratives of Sabita (Muslim), Radha (Hindu) and Sharleen (Christian), migrant women in their mid-forties, who have been working as maids, cooks and cleaners in middle-class housing colonies in Kolkata, a city in eastern India. Informal understandings of gendered oppressions across religious traditions often dominate the conversations of the three working-class women. Like many labourers from slums and lower-class neighbourhoods, they meet and debate religious concerns in informal ‘resting places’ (under a tree, on a park bench, at a tea stall, on a train, at a corner of a railway platform). These anonymous spaces are usually devoid of religious symbols, as well as any moral surveillance of women’s colloquial abuse of male dominance in society. I show how the anecdotes of struggle, culled across multiple religious practices, intersect with the shared existential realities of these urban workers. They temporarily empower female members of the informal workforce in the city, to create loosely defined gendered solidarities in the face of patriarchal authority, and reflect on daily discrimination against economically marginalised migrant women. I argue that these fleeting urban rituals underline the more vital role of (what I describe as) poor people’s ‘casual philosophies’, in enhancing empathy and dialogue between communities that are characterised by political tensions in India.

AB - This article revolves around the narratives of Sabita (Muslim), Radha (Hindu) and Sharleen (Christian), migrant women in their mid-forties, who have been working as maids, cooks and cleaners in middle-class housing colonies in Kolkata, a city in eastern India. Informal understandings of gendered oppressions across religious traditions often dominate the conversations of the three working-class women. Like many labourers from slums and lower-class neighbourhoods, they meet and debate religious concerns in informal ‘resting places’ (under a tree, on a park bench, at a tea stall, on a train, at a corner of a railway platform). These anonymous spaces are usually devoid of religious symbols, as well as any moral surveillance of women’s colloquial abuse of male dominance in society. I show how the anecdotes of struggle, culled across multiple religious practices, intersect with the shared existential realities of these urban workers. They temporarily empower female members of the informal workforce in the city, to create loosely defined gendered solidarities in the face of patriarchal authority, and reflect on daily discrimination against economically marginalised migrant women. I argue that these fleeting urban rituals underline the more vital role of (what I describe as) poor people’s ‘casual philosophies’, in enhancing empathy and dialogue between communities that are characterised by political tensions in India.

U2 - 10.3390/rel10090531

DO - 10.3390/rel10090531

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

SP - 1

EP - 13

JO - Religions

JF - Religions

SN - 2077-1444

IS - 9

M1 - 531

ER -

ID: 227421059