Gender, Space and Identity: Women Narratives and Interpretations, Tea Gardens, North Bengal

Authors

  • Sarkar Sumita Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5958/2231-4555.2018.00011.6

Keywords:

Gender, Identity, Space, women workers, Tea plantation, Displacedment of labour force, Sustainable livelihood

Abstract

Plantation space is the most significant one and central to women workers’ interest, as these women are trans-generationally emigrant workforce since the inception of plantation economy till present, and lost their connection from their native roots/origin of the community, resulting into perceiving ‘plantation setting’ not only as economic but also as their social space. Therefore, both intersection of their attachment to social and economic space grew simultaneously. Hence when, economic space was challenged by closure and severe sickness of gardens/plants as economic production of space, it impacted on their social space as well their narratives’ substantiate the same through, a collective sense of suffering and belonging, especially in ‘gendered’ ways (as women).

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Published

01-Aug-18

How to Cite

Gender, Space and Identity: Women Narratives and Interpretations, Tea Gardens, North Bengal. (2018). Journal of Exclusion Studies, 8(2), 146-159. https://doi.org/10.5958/2231-4555.2018.00011.6