Journal Article10.1353/lib.2021.0017
Introduction
TL;DR: Kuiti as discussed by the authors showed how Padmarag offers a vision of interreligious sisterhood, particularly by proposing Hindu-Muslim com-munal unity, against a backdrop of growing tensions between the Hindu and Muslim communities in fin-de-siècle British India.
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Abstract: futuristic elements of science fiction, and Padmarag (1924), a short novel originally written in Bengali, which can be seen as com-plementary parts of a feminist utopian vision. These works show a desire for an egalitarian, decolonized nation, cutting through barriers of religion, gender, race, and class. Kuiti’s article shows how both fictions offer a vision of interreligious sisterhood, particularly by proposing Hindu-Muslim com-munal unity, against a backdrop of growing tensions between the Hindu and Muslim communities in fin-de-siècle British India. The article also shows how the Indigo Rebellion of 1859 in colonial Bengal is represented in Padmarag to create critiques of predatory colonial masculinity. Hossain’s utopian
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References
Elements of a Theory of Human Rights
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the elements of a theory of human rights, which see them as pronouncements in social ethics, sustainable by open public reasoning, and examine whether legislation is the pre-eminent, or even a necessary, route through which human rights can be expressed.
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Utopianism: A Very Short Introduction
Lyman Tower Sargent
- 23 Sep 2010
TL;DR: In this article, the forms of Utopian literature have been studied and discussed, including intentional communities, nonwestern utopianism, and Settler/colonized utopianism.
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Introduction: Utopias from Other Cultural Traditions
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