Reinterpreting Sita: A Feminist Analysis of Gender and Agency in The Ramayana
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Abstract
This research reinterprets the character of Sita in Valmiki‘s The Ramayana through
the critical frameworks of Judith Butler's theory of gender performativity as well as religious
feminism to offer a reinterpretation of her position and identity within a patriarchal social and
moral order. Traditionally, Sita is represented as an ideal, obedient and self-sacrificing
woman, she has often been read as passive and submissive; however, a close textual analysis
of key narrative moments, including the Swayamvara, Exile, Captivity in Lanka, Agni
Pariksha, and her final Return to the Earth, reveals a pattern of deliberate, ethically grounded
actions that complicate this perception. The study is therefore justified by the need to
reexamine female characters whose identities have been predominantly shaped by patriarchal
interpretations and to address the limited critical attention given to forms of resistance
expressed through culturally authorised roles. Religious feminism allows for a
reinterpretation of Sita as a spiritually autonomous figure whose moral authority challenges
male dominated explanation of the epic. While using Butler's idea of performativity, we see
how the multiple occasions of Sita performing the ideal feminine roles function as a site of
both compliance and subversion. Collectively, these frameworks illustrate that Sita negotiates
patriarchal expectations in ways that expose their internal tensions and limitations. This
reinterpretation creates a new vision of Sita as a conscious resistance to the limits of
patriarchal expectation, whose autonomous ethical choices affirm her dignity, identity,
autonomy, and moral sovereignty within her sociocultural constraints. In addition to
analysing the character of Sita as she appears in Valmiki's The Ramayana, this dissertation
provides an analysis of the changing perception of Sita through a comparison of the various
adaptations of her story with the original Valmiki‘s The Ramayana and the implications of
those changes for contemporary understandings of Sita.
