
The Position of the Women Revolutionaries in the Revolutionary Movement of Bengal: The Revolution and the Land and the Society
Author(s) -
Nupur Biswas
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
international journal of advanced research in science, communication and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2581-9429
DOI - 10.48175/ijarsct-3304
Subject(s) - bengal , revolutionary movement , harmony (color) , opposition (politics) , political science , law , gender studies , sociology , political economy , history , politics , art , visual arts , archaeology , bay
It is some women who participated, in general, in the freedom struggle of India and in particular, in the revolutionary movement fraught with dangers and difficulties. The incidence of women’s getting involved in a revolutionary movement by way of their being defiant of various social inhibitions on the one hand and both the stubborn opposition cum the repression of the British government, on the other hand is, of course, an object preserving of land approbation and commendation too. Despite, an initiative taken by social reformers more than one of the 19th century, the Indian women, save some brilliant exceptions, could not usually churn out from the circumference of the inner apartments. But the participation of these women in the revolutionary movement by way of their overcoming adverse situations indicates that women also succeeded in leaving behind them a great and noble contribution in natural life. Confronted with so many hazards travails lying the path to revolution and through going underground these women forces fought tooth and nail and neck to neck with their male counterparts and at the same time act themselves to different constructive works and service as well. Over and above, the way they maintained a balance between their domestic life and the revolutionary activities is unparalleled.