Dramatization of Women's Identity: A Feminist Reading of Selected Maithili Dramas
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Department of English
Abstract
This dissertation explores the portrayal of women characters in the selected Maithili
dramas written by Mahendra Malangia’s [Broken End of a Thread](1973A.D.)and
[Birju Biltuand Father](1979 A.D.) and Ramesh Ranjan Jha’s Domkachh (2014
A.D.) and Sakhi(2018 A.D.).Malangia’s dramas depict Maithil society during the
1970 swhere as Jha’s drama was written in the post-1990 sand presents the women of
traditional Maithil society, who are mostly guided by patriarchal ideology and are
supposed to be subservient to the male characters of their families. However, Jha as a
contemporary Maithil dramatist offers certain agency to the women characters who
are aware and conscious of the domination that they are facing in contemporary
Maithil society. Both the dramatist sillustrate the transition of women from
submissive to assertive in Maithil society during the different political, social, and
cultural shifts in Nepal.
Judith Butler’s idea of gender identity is used as a primary tool of analysis where she
defines that gender identity keeps on shifting as there befalls a transition in the
indicators of identities established by the patriarchal society. The fixed gender
stereotypes established by the patriarchal tendencies need to be deconstructed as
identity is not something fluid and that is the only way a change can occur in the
society.The dissertation uses ideas from Raymond Williams’s concept of human
identity as a secondary tool of analysis. He asserts that the identity of an individual
cannot be analyzed as a separate entity from the cultural, political, social, and
economic changes happening around that individual.The identity of individual
changes as per the shift in culture, politics, economy, art, and society.