Writing, Dreaming, and Freedom: Rokeya Hossain at the Limit of Reform in colonial Bangladesh

This article looks at the work of Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain (1880-1932), the writer of Sultana’s Dream and an individual who is claimed as both a national figure in Bangladesh and a global figure by international feminists. I foreground Rokeya’s narrative and stylistic choices (the ‘how’ of her texts...

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Main Author: Parna Sengupta
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Mnémosyne 2020-03-01
Series:Genre & Histoire
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5051
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author Parna Sengupta
author_facet Parna Sengupta
author_sort Parna Sengupta
collection DOAJ
description This article looks at the work of Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain (1880-1932), the writer of Sultana’s Dream and an individual who is claimed as both a national figure in Bangladesh and a global figure by international feminists. I foreground Rokeya’s narrative and stylistic choices (the ‘how’ of her texts rather than the ‘what’) to reveal the ways in which her reflections on writing become a space in which she asserts women’s claims to authority and tries to capture the elusive nature of imagination and creativity. Drawing on the work of Hélène Cixous, I look at Rokeya’s experimentations with genre through her use of the waking dream, a narrative frame which allows her to draw attention to the act of composition as related to forms of inspiration and states of consciousness that are not reducible to a discourse of rationality or reform. The essay then suggests that another entry point to understand the waking dream is its place within the Islamic tradition, where dreams are often the vehicles through which the pious receive revelation, guidance and knowledge.
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spelling doaj-art-a27b3a7fed4a4569a44c4f50a39503f42025-01-09T16:23:02ZfraAssociation MnémosyneGenre & Histoire2102-58862020-03-012510.4000/genrehistoire.5051Writing, Dreaming, and Freedom: Rokeya Hossain at the Limit of Reform in colonial BangladeshParna SenguptaThis article looks at the work of Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain (1880-1932), the writer of Sultana’s Dream and an individual who is claimed as both a national figure in Bangladesh and a global figure by international feminists. I foreground Rokeya’s narrative and stylistic choices (the ‘how’ of her texts rather than the ‘what’) to reveal the ways in which her reflections on writing become a space in which she asserts women’s claims to authority and tries to capture the elusive nature of imagination and creativity. Drawing on the work of Hélène Cixous, I look at Rokeya’s experimentations with genre through her use of the waking dream, a narrative frame which allows her to draw attention to the act of composition as related to forms of inspiration and states of consciousness that are not reducible to a discourse of rationality or reform. The essay then suggests that another entry point to understand the waking dream is its place within the Islamic tradition, where dreams are often the vehicles through which the pious receive revelation, guidance and knowledge.https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5051words colonialislamdreamindiawriting
spellingShingle Parna Sengupta
Writing, Dreaming, and Freedom: Rokeya Hossain at the Limit of Reform in colonial Bangladesh
Genre & Histoire
words colonial
islam
dream
india
writing
title Writing, Dreaming, and Freedom: Rokeya Hossain at the Limit of Reform in colonial Bangladesh
title_full Writing, Dreaming, and Freedom: Rokeya Hossain at the Limit of Reform in colonial Bangladesh
title_fullStr Writing, Dreaming, and Freedom: Rokeya Hossain at the Limit of Reform in colonial Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Writing, Dreaming, and Freedom: Rokeya Hossain at the Limit of Reform in colonial Bangladesh
title_short Writing, Dreaming, and Freedom: Rokeya Hossain at the Limit of Reform in colonial Bangladesh
title_sort writing dreaming and freedom rokeya hossain at the limit of reform in colonial bangladesh
topic words colonial
islam
dream
india
writing
url https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5051
work_keys_str_mv AT parnasengupta writingdreamingandfreedomrokeyahossainatthelimitofreformincolonialbangladesh