I have writer's block and it is the most frustrating thing to experience. I want to write, but I don't know about what. I want to read, but I can't focus. It's scary and it sucks. I am going to resurrect this blog for my own personal use to vent, but in the meantime, I have decided to start a different blog with a little more focus.
As a buildup from my own research project this past semester concerning South Asian American performance groups, I have decided this new blog (unnamed) will feature just that- SAA's who are involved in some sort of performance. I'll be happy to advertise anything, and I will regularly write features about whatever music I'm listening to, performers I've seen, articles I'm reading..whatever. Any contributions are greatly appreciated- I definitely don't want to be the only person writing.
Thoughts? opinions? Have any ideas for a name? Holler.
This interview is x-posted to the SAALT Blog, The Saalt Spot. Check it out! I'm the blog intern :)
On Tuesday April 7th, Shamita Das Dasgupta, spoke at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for the annual Balgopal Lecture on Human Rights and Asian Americans . Dr. Das Dasgupta is the cofounder of Manavi (New Jersey), the first organization in the U.S. to focus on violence against South Asian immigrant women. She is currently teaching as an adjunct professor at NYU Law School. The following are excerpts of a private interview with her for SAALT.
Addressing a group of around 80 students, faculty, and staff, Dr. Das Dasgupta spoke about intimate violence against SA women in the US. Dr. Das Dasgupta told us that, out of 160 South Asian women surveyed in the United States:
-35% claim current male partner physically abused them at least once
-32.5% claim such abuse has happened within the last year
-19% claim their current male partner has sexually abused them at least once during their time together
-15% claim at this abuse happened within the past year
As she clarified, these statistics prove that domestic violence is not restricted to uneducated and marginalized community.
In a private interview, Dr. Das. Dasgupta discussed socioeconomic strata and domestic abuse in India:
"In the upper class, when a woman is raped outside of the home, it is assumed that it is because she is exposing herself. Women still feel as if the home is a safe place, and that sexual violence can only occur outside of the home. On the other hand, the poorer classes know that women must travel outside of the home. Also, oftentimes, their "homes" are shantytowns and are very exposed spaces. The poorer classes understand that sexual and domestic violence can occur anywhere. The whole issue is of a woman being isolated- upper classes feel that if a woman is isolated, she cannot be harmed."
Returning to her work in America, Dr. Das Dasgupta spoke to me about some of the narratives she has heard from the women she has worked with regarding religion and domestic abuse:
"There is this concept called sarwan saha which many people abide by. The concept is often interpreted as "You're the one who can change bad men into good men. Your responsibility, as a woman, is to endure", is how it is read. Women think that religious culture is to endure- "My husband is beating me because I am failing and he is teaching me what I need to know."
After hearing these narratives from many women, Dr. Das Dasgupta said that:
"I have actually found passages in Muslim and Hindu texts that really celebrate the strength of women. One particular Hindu text says "God is not in the home where the woman is not celebrated". When I find these empowering texts and show them to women, it is like they are awakening. I ask them- "Why is this passage invisible? Is it not also a part of your faith background? I really ask the women to challenge how and why tradition is created. "
As a second generation Indian American woman, I was curious to see what sort of advice she has for me and other second generation South Asian American women:
"For a lot of second generation women, I see that their parents are pushing them into marriages they don't want-often with men from South Asia, and often with men who are South Asian American. If they choose to rebel, divorce, etc., their parents tell them that "you are not our daughter anymore.". These women are told that they are betraying our community, [and that they are a] traitor to our culture. It often drives women away from identifying as Indian American or engaging with the community"
I wish they would not reject the culture but rather claim a space within the community. We are incumbent on the second generation to change us, and I would advise them to not let other people define what your generation consists of."
And, finally, as a bookwork, I asked her for a book recommendation- specifically, a book that has changed her life:
It is a Bengali book. Unfortunately, I do not think that they have translated it into English. It is called The First Promise by Ashapurna Devi. It is a wonderful story that discusses many issues women face- I read it when I was a young girl and still hold it very close to my heart.
Hello, friends! No updates in a while...classes, research projects, and interviewing for graduate schools has taken over my life. I'll be done with the last part after April 7th, though, so expect some more posts then!
As for now, I'm in the process of three research projects, all of which I could use some help on. If you have some cool blogs to check out, articles to read, or people to interview, let me know! Comments are cool, but so are emails/phone calls...just a plea to keep me in mind as you're doing your reading. My projects are below:
1.) An ethnography on South Asian American competitive performance teams at UIUC. Self-explanatory, but I could definitely use some supplemental reading if you have any recommendations :) I'm working with the Raas team, Fizaa, and Chai-Town, so if you know of any relevant articles about any of these performance styles, holler atcha girl.
2.) Media portrayal of "honor killings" in the United States and how they're racialized. I'm trying to find out about murder cases which have been labeled as "honor killings" by the media. Links to both news articles and academic sources would be greatly appreciated.
3.) Ways in which Bollywood films portrayed East Asian people/East Asia as an entity. Mostly I'm focusing on movies from the 50s-70s.
Yup. That's my life right now. :)