III.O.1978.002 | Women and Their Affines


 > III.O.1978.002
Sharma, Ursula M.
“Women and Their Affines: The Veil as a Symbol of Separation” in Man (London) 13.2 (1978), 218–233.
DOI: 10.2307/2800246
ISSN: 0025-1496
Notes from Source: In north India, the term ghungat nikalna refers to the practice whereby a woman veils her face from all male affines senior to her own husband. A description of ghungat as practised in Ghanyari, a Himalayan village, is given here. Generally, anthropogists have described ghungat within the context of discussions of household organisation. However, as women extend ghungat to all classificatory and ‘courtesy’ affines, i.e. to most of the senior men in the village, ghungat is better understood as a practice which controls the activities of women within the village community as a whole, not just within the household. Ghungat limits the interaction of junior women with senior males, especially high caste senior males, i.e. those who may be expected to wield most power in the community. It is also a depersonalising device, rendering women socially invisible in public contexts. Yet women in Ghanyari are not social ciphers and the device is not wholly effective. It must be understood as a didactic practice, defining an ideal pattern of interaction with affines which in only partially realised in reality.
Further Notes: Place: London Publisher: Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland
References: I.E.1990.002

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