The Prisoner of Gender:  Panopticon, Persuasion, and Surveillance of Women in Kavita Kané’s Menaka’s Choice Cover Image

The Prisoner of Gender: Panopticon, Persuasion, and Surveillance of Women in Kavita Kané’s Menaka’s Choice
The Prisoner of Gender: Panopticon, Persuasion, and Surveillance of Women in Kavita Kané’s Menaka’s Choice

Author(s): Nagendra Kumar
Subject(s): Gender Studies, Studies of Literature, Other Language Literature, Studies in violence and power
Published by: Editura Universităţii din Bucureşti
Keywords: docile bodies; individuality; apsaras; Hindu mythology; panopticon;

Summary/Abstract: In the mythology-inspired novel Menaka’s Choice (2016), Kavita Kané discovers that the female body is continuously perceived both as an object of sexual desire and as an individual being by disrupting the conventional understanding of Apsara Menaka. Using Foucault’s concept of docile bodies and organic individuality the paper studies how power, in the form of ‘system’, imposes docility on women’s bodies. The paper weaves the potential for feminist thought as the novel rediscovers the recondite experiences that have been shrouded for centuries by giving central position to silent agents of Hindu mythology. Eventually, it attempts to analyse the act of seduction from the context of gender and how the individual tries to resist that disciplinary system.

  • Issue Year: X/2020
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 89-101
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: English
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