Stree: The Dialectic of Veneration and Subjugation in Indian Society

The concept of Stree (woman) in the Indian cultural imagination occupies a unique, paradoxical space. She is venerated as Devi (goddess) yet subjugated as a subordinate in the domestic sphere. This paper examines the construction of Stree through ancient texts, colonial legal reforms, and contemporary popular culture. It argues that the idealization of the “good woman” (Savitri, Sita) functions as a mechanism of patriarchal control, while the lived reality of Stree is a continuous negotiation between traditional dharma and modern agency. The paper concludes by analyzing how contemporary feminist movements in India are dismantling the monolithic definition of Stree to embrace plurality, autonomy, and resistance. 1. Introduction The term Stree in Sanskrit derives from the root √stu (to praise) or is alternatively linked to √stri (to spread or extend). Etymologically, it suggests a being of expansion and nurture. However, the socio-legal and religious history of India reveals a stark contrast: the Stree is simultaneously the source of life ( Prakriti ) and the subject of life-long discipline. This paper explores two central questions: (1) How did ancient and medieval discourses construct the ideal Stree ? (2) How is the contemporary Stree challenging and redefining these constructs? 2. The Classical Construction: Dharma, Pativrata, and the Double Bind The foundational texts—the Manusmriti (c. 200 BCE–200 CE), the Dharma-shastras , and later the Niti-shastras —provide the blueprint for the ideal Stree .

The horror-comedy Stree , directed by Amar Kaushik, is a powerful allegory. The film’s ghost is a wronged woman who abducts men when they call women “Stree” (a term of respect) at night. The twist: the village men had historically exploited and abandoned her. The film critiques the conditional respect afforded to Stree : “Respect her, but only in daylight; only when she serves.” The final lines, “Stree ko kabhi ‘Stree’ mat bulao” (Never call a woman ‘Stree’), satirize the fragility of masculine power and the consequences of objectification.

The Pativrata (the woman devoted to her husband) is the supreme archetype. Sita (Ramayana) and Savitri (Mahabharata) are held as exemplars. Savitri, despite her intellect and spiritual power, uses her agency only to resurrect her husband, reaffirming the husband as the axis of her existence. This model teaches that a Stree’s power is not for herself but for the preservation of patriarchal lineage. A Sati (widow who immolates herself) is the ultimate Pativrata , erasing her own existence to merge with her dead husband’s identity. 3. The Colonial Interruption: Reform without Revolution The 19th-century British colonial encounter brought modernity, but with a gendered bias. Social reformers like Raja Rammohan Roy (abolition of Sati , 1829) and Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar (Hindu Widow Remarriage Act, 1856) sought to ameliorate the condition of Stree . However, as Partha Chatterjee argues in The Nation and Its Fragments , the “women’s question” became a site of nationalist anxiety. The Stree was to be modern in the material world (education, hygiene) but essentially traditional in the spiritual/domestic sphere. This created the “new woman” – educated but domestic, modern but chaste – an internal colonization of the female body. 4. The Contemporary Stree : Popular Culture as Battleground In the 21st century, the figure of Stree has moved from the shastra (text) to the screen, where new battles are fought.

Manu’s infamous decree, “pitā rakshati kaumāre, bhartā rakshati yauvane, putrah rakshati vārdhakye” (In childhood, the father protects; in youth, the husband; in old age, the sons—a woman is never fit for independence), codified perpetual guardianship. This rakshana (protection) is ideologically framed as care but functionally operates as control over mobility, sexuality, and property.