TY - JOUR
T1 - Gendered isolation, idealised communities and
the role of collective power in West Bengal selfhelp groups
AU - Dulhunty, Annabel
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Empowerment and power have long been fervently contested in feminist theory and geography. Much debate
focuses on whether empowerment is mainly monetary or
more holistic and emancipatory. In both cases, most of the
literature centres on individual empowerment and internal
‘power within’. Much less attention, however, has been
given to the idea of ‘power with’ and how friendship, solidarity and emotional connections are fundamental to
empowerment and yet are highly vulnerable to outside
influence. Drawing on field research from Self-Help Groups
in West Bengal, this article highlights how the formation of
‘power with’ is particularly important in contexts of gendered isolation, where patriarchy is enacted through the
spatial control of women and removal of women from the
public sphere, illustrating that communities in the Global
South are not necessarily sites of collective unity and cohesion. These findings contest both idealised notions of community and mainstream theories of power and
empowerment and in turn, provide crucial insights for feminist geography and power theory.
AB - Empowerment and power have long been fervently contested in feminist theory and geography. Much debate
focuses on whether empowerment is mainly monetary or
more holistic and emancipatory. In both cases, most of the
literature centres on individual empowerment and internal
‘power within’. Much less attention, however, has been
given to the idea of ‘power with’ and how friendship, solidarity and emotional connections are fundamental to
empowerment and yet are highly vulnerable to outside
influence. Drawing on field research from Self-Help Groups
in West Bengal, this article highlights how the formation of
‘power with’ is particularly important in contexts of gendered isolation, where patriarchy is enacted through the
spatial control of women and removal of women from the
public sphere, illustrating that communities in the Global
South are not necessarily sites of collective unity and cohesion. These findings contest both idealised notions of community and mainstream theories of power and
empowerment and in turn, provide crucial insights for feminist geography and power theory.
U2 - 10.1080/0966369X.2020.1754167
DO - 10.1080/0966369X.2020.1754167
M3 - Article
VL - 28
SP - 725
EP - 746
JO - Gender, Place and Culture
JF - Gender, Place and Culture
IS - 5
ER -