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Murder as Praxis? Theorizing Marxist Feminism in Pakistan Through Akhtar Baloch's Prison Narratives

Umaima Miraj (University of Toronto, Canada)

Marxist Thought in South Asia

ISBN: 978-1-83797-183-1, eISBN: 978-1-83797-182-4

Publication date: 11 December 2023

Abstract

In this chapter, I uncover the jail diaries of a revolutionary woman of the 20th century Pakistan, Akhtar Baloch. Although feminism in Pakistan has oscillated between liberal and postcolonial camps, through reading Akhtar's diaries, compiled as Prison Narratives (2017), I center Akhtar's own struggles for Sindh, along with the resistance of the women she met in the prison convicted for the murders of their husbands, to better theorize Marxist Feminism in Pakistan that overturns the structures that commodify women through love and revolution. My article will show the commodification of women's bodies; the “sale” of women through marriage as the goal of this commodification; the lovelessness and alienation women experience in commodified marriages; the unexpected fall in love with someone whom it is subversive for the commodified wife to love; the subversion of this unexpected event that leads to the attempted resolution of this tension through murder; the separation of the lovers through the incarceration of the woman by the capitalist-patriarchal state; and finally, the unexpected outcome (albeit the most common one) that the male lover abandons his female lover once she's jailed, but the defiantly brave female lover finds platonic love in jail through close female friendships with other women who are similarly brave in both love and in revolution. Through this exposition, I show that Akhtar's diaries provide a way for us to build on Marxist Feminist theory through a theory of love and revolution from a Sindhi feminist perspective.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

Thank you to Kristin Plys for her incredible insights and conversations around love and revolution. Thanks to Joseph Bryant, Kanishka Goonewardena, Ayyaz Malick, Priyansh, and the members of the Marxism Research Working Group at the University of Toronto, Mississauga. Thank you to Alexander I R White, Julian Go, Zophia Edwards, and the participants at the SASE Decolonizing Development miniconference for their helpful questions.

Citation

Miraj, U. (2023), "Murder as Praxis? Theorizing Marxist Feminism in Pakistan Through Akhtar Baloch's Prison Narratives ", Plys, K., Priyansh and Goonewardena, K. (Ed.) Marxist Thought in South Asia (Political Power and Social Theory, Vol. 40), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 75-97. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0198-871920230000040006

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Umaima Miraj. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited