Neha and BM Yadav
This study analyses the decolonisation of the female identity in the novels of Shobha De and Bessie Head, emphasising how their female heroines confront gender oppression, trauma, and emancipation in postcolonial contexts. The research employs a comparative approach to elucidate the psychological and sociological challenges faced by women in De’s urban Indian environments and Head’s Southern African contexts, exposing the interconnections of patriarchy, colonialism, and individual agency. Both writers illustrate women opposing institutional oppression via resistance, self-reinvention, or the reclamation of bodily and narrative autonomy. The research paper contends that their works contest prevailing narratives by prioritising marginalised female voices, revealing the enduring impacts of colonial trauma while proposing avenues for liberation. Themes such as mental resilience, cultural displacement, and the subversion of gender norms are examined to illustrate how De and Head create liberatory narratives that challenge both Western and indigenous patriarchal frameworks. This study highlights the significance of intersectional methods in comprehending women's resistance and self-determination within various postcolonial contexts via the lens of feminist and postcolonial ideas. The books of De and Head significantly enhance literary and political discussions on decolonisation, presenting intricate depictions of female emancipation among complex oppressions.
Pages: 23-26 | 70 Views 33 Downloads