Mahadevi Varma:  Political Essays on Women, Culture, and Nation
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Mahadevi Varma: Political Essays on Women, Culture, and Nation B ...

Chapter :  Editor’s Introduction
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individuality. In her words, “Everyone has the need for the development of an unfettered individuality, because without it, man would not be able to express his will power and intention, nor would he be able to weigh his duty on the scales of justice and injustice”.56 She goes on to argue that women cannot express their desires and exercise their will because their personalities are not self-defined and are but the mere shadows of their men.57 The solution, according to Mahadevi, is not to be a mere reflection (pratibimb) of the original (bimb) but to develop a strong sense of self and individuality. She writes:

We do not need the permission of the world in order to cut away the fetters that we have accepted from time immemorial. But if a captive were to cut off his feet along with the shackles that bind them, then we must keep in mind that his desire for freedom would be in vain. If without protecting our individuality and our distinctiveness, and if a necessary portion of our life along with our bondage were to slip away, then it would be inevitable that we would find freedom from one type of bondage only to enter into another.58

She goes on to say that because women’s individual selfhoods and personalities have been thwarted in the self-interest of men, society as a whole has developed under the “artificial cover of tradition”.59 The psychological effects of such oppression, according to her, are detrimental to women, as they do not help women grow and develop as individuals in their own right; moreover, they cannot become free citizens of a nation. While this last idea is echoed by Gandhi as well, Mahadevi’s intervention has been informed by her commitment to gender equality. Her subjectivity as a woman enabled the type of thorough social critique that Gandhi did not subscribe to, not because he was a man, but because his commitments to subjective independence and national freedom were fundamentally informed by a more traditional reading of gender, rather than a gendered reading of religion and tradition. In other words, Gandhi’s view of gender was based on perceived biological differences between men and women and he recognized that these roles—defined as they were by biology—were integral to socioreligious life in India.