Samudayik Shakti: working-class feminism and social organisation in Subhash Camp, New Delhi

Datta, A. (2007). Samudayik Shakti: working-class feminism and social organisation in Subhash Camp, New Delhi. Gender, Place, and Culture, 14(2), 215-231. https://doi.org/10.1080/09663690701213818
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This article illustrates the intersections between architecture and agency in Subhash Camp, a squatter settlement in New Delhi, by ‘situating activism in place’. It highlights the significance of place in social action by examining the architecture of everyday places- the house, the street and the square - as the sites of both individual transformations and collective consciousness. Through observations of the activities of and interviews with members of Samudayik Shakti, a women’s organisation and a men’s panchayat, this article highlights a number of related processes in Subhash Camp: how different women experienced different places through everyday spatial practices; how the spatial practices in these places were shaped by different social structures at different scales, from the family to the state; how the architecture of these places was significant both as sites of control and of emancipation of women’s bodies; and how this dynamic contributed to the making of social action in Subhash Camp.

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