The Shaktitva Podcast: All about Dharma, Feminism and Decoloniality Neha Srivastava
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- Society & Culture
All about Dharma, Feminism and Decoloniality
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Ep 3: Israel-Palestine War and the civilizational conflicts that plague the world
Gurpreet and Neha explore the situation in the Middle East with the Israel-Palestine conflict from the perspective of Hindu women, the shocking reaction to the situation in Western campuses, the popular sentiments in India and more.
They explore whether "this is what decolonization looks like" and why decolonization looks very different based on the civilizational values being defended.
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Ep 2: Sexual atrocities under 1000yrs of colonial rule and Hindu trans-generational trauma
South Asian Feminism repeatedly lionizes Mughal rule including faux-feminist takes on the liberation of women in Harems, when the reality was that life for women in colonial rule was stark. Violence against women has been a salient feature of colonialism. We talk about sexual slavery in Harems, Jauhar and the trans-generational trauma of Hindu women from being repeatedly reminded of that history.
02.15 - Unique Hindu context and it's absence in South Asian feminism
08.10 - Hindu experience: exploitation of women during invasions and foreign rule.
17.56 - shortfalls and lack of Bhartiya experience in South Asian Feminism
20.30 - Hindu Transgenerational trauma and responses. Jauhar.
37.42 - Colonial excesses and case for decoloniality.
48.53 - British propaganda to corrupt Hindu identity
56.20 - Inaction w.r.t factual correction of historical narratives. Glorification of invaders. -
Ep 1: Why can't Indian women relate to feminism?
Gurpreet Chopra and Neha Srivastava discuss their individual journeys and the evolution of their relationship to feminism as it is understood in India, criticisms of mainstream South Asian feminism and an introduction to indigenous Feminism.
Recommended Books:
The India They Saw - Meenakshi Jain & Sandhya Jain
The Beautiful Tree: Indigenous Indian Education in the Eighteenth Century - Dharampal
Revisiting the Educational Heritage of India - Sahana Singh