Conceptualising Brahmanical Patriarchy in Early India: Gender, Caste, Class and State

Conceptualising Brahmanical Patriarchy in Early India: Gender, Caste, Class and State

Uma Chakravarti
Economic and Political Weekly

Uma Chakravarti's classic essay develops the concept of Brahmanical patriarchy, showing how caste order is reproduced through control over women's sexuality, marriage, inheritance, and kinship. It is essential for understanding Indian gender history, caste violence, and anti-caste feminism.

📋 Abstract

The essay analyzes early Indian historical materials to show how caste, gender, class, and state power are linked. It argues that upper-caste reproduction depends on regulating women's sexuality and marriage boundaries, making Brahmanical patriarchy a central mechanism of caste hierarchy.

🔑 Keywords

Brahmanical patriarchy caste gender early India patriarchy
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Uma Chakravarti’s “Conceptualising Brahmanical Patriarchy in Early India” provides a powerful historical framework for understanding gender and caste in Indian society. Rather than asking a broad question about “women’s status in tradition,” the essay asks a more precise one: how does caste order require the control of women’s sexuality, marriage, and reproduction in order to sustain itself?

The concept of Brahmanical patriarchy matters because it disrupts the habit of treating patriarchy as a single universal structure. Chakravarti shows that in caste society women’s bodies become central to boundary management: who may marry whom, how lineage is kept “pure,” how inheritance is organized, and how families serve the reproduction of social hierarchy. These are not merely private matters; they are produced through state power, religious normativity, and class relations.

The essay also clarifies why feminist work against gender violence cannot be separated from anti-caste analysis. If we speak only of “women’s oppression,” we miss how risk, stigma, and control differ across caste locations. For FemRes, this text anchors the caste/gender coverage pillar and connects directly to Dalit feminism, decolonial feminism, intersectionality, and feminist history.

Paper Info

Author: Uma Chakravarti
Published: April 3, 1993
Journal: Economic and Political Weekly
Language: English

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