The secret and gendered lives of the underground
Date
2022
Authors
Lahiri-Dutt, Kuntala
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Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
The underground—for decades the invisible ‘other’ of landscape and terrain in geography—has emerged in political ecology literature as the source of ‘stuff’, or material things, resources and commodities that are not deemed intrinsically valuable until extracted. As a corrective, this paper offers a feminist political ecology perspective that brings subaltern women’s voices to the forefront, and argues that the underground is co-constituted as a gendered space by gendered humans. As evidence, I take the readers on a journey into the belly of a coalmine where humans labour, and bring out women’s voices that narrate their experiences and imaginations to create the underground as a space teeming with social life. These alternative and gendered narratives reinstate the diverse, complex, and secret lives of this netherworld, draw attention to the politics of imagining space, and potentially shift geographers’ focus to interpreting the underground as a gendered social space.
Description
Keywords
Feminist political ecology, gendered spaces, India, underground collieries, underground space
Citation
Collections
Source
Gender, Place and Culture
Type
Journal article
Book Title
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License Rights
Restricted until
2099-12-31