000 02656nam a2200289 i 4500
003 CUTN
005 20241030110838.0
008 780705s1977 mou 001 0beng
020 _a0836400097
020 _a9789388540698
041 _aEnglish
043 _aa-ii---
082 0 0 _a301.412
_bMAZ
100 1 _aMazumdar, Shudha.
245 1 2 _aA pattern of life :
_bthe memoirs of an Indian woman /
_cShudha Mazumdar ; translated and edited, Geraldine H. Forbes.
260 _aColumbia, Mo. :
_bSouth Asia Books,
_c1977.
300 _aviii, 246 p. ;
_c23 cm.
500 _aIncludes index.
520 _aMany books have been written about Indian women during the early part of the twentieth century but we have few accounts by women themselves. Shudha Mazumdar's A Pattern of Life vividly portrays the life and attitudes of a Bengali woman living through the first three decades of the century. Shudha Ghosh (b. 1898) was the daughter of a wealthy, Europeanized Zamindar. The family owned vast estates in east and west Bengal and despite the Westernized attire and life-style of the father was careful to maintain its status within the community. Ceremonies were performed in an appropriate manner, marriages were arranged with careful attention to detail and the father's influence on Shudha was carefully monitored. In all aspects of socialization, Shudha grew up between two cultures. Her mother stressed the traditional culture, her father the Western. The mother’s victory was an arranged marriage for Shudha when she was aged thirteen, the father’s victory came later – when Shudha, as a married woman with two sons, wrote and published short stories, joined and became an active member of a number of social service organizations and, finally, served as the?Indian?delegate?to?the?International?Labour?Organization. There is little about Shudha Mazumdar's life that has not been com­mented on in A Pattern of Life. She is a woman with great talent for observation and an eye for the amusing and the absurd. When she was still a young girl her father presented her with a diary and so began a life-long habit. While her main concern was her personal life, she has com­mented at length on family affairs and on the growing nationalist mood of the country. This book provides new insights into Indian family life, the role of women in?modern?India?and?the?potential?of?Indian?women?for?social?change.
600 1 0 _aMazumdar, Shudha.
650 0 _aWomen
650 0 _zIndia
_zBengal
_xBiography.
700 1 _aForbes, Geraldine Hancock,
700 1 _d1943-
906 _a7
_bcbc
_corignew
_d2
_eopcn
_f19
_gy-gencatlg
942 _2ddc
_cBOOKS
999 _c43812
_d43812