Geeta Sane
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Geeta Janardan Sane (Devanagari: गीता जनार्दन साने) (1907–1991) was a feminist writer from Maharashtra, India.
Early life
Sane was born in Amravati. Her father was a teacher who later trained to be a lawyer. Both parents of Sane were progressive in their thinking. They conducted their daughters' weddings without any religious rituals. The weddings "must have cost a rupee and a half, each," Sane once said.
Among students studying at Nagpur University in her days, Sane was the first female to receive a bachelor's degree in the faculty of Science. Before her, females at that university, just like at most other universities in India in those times, studied liberal arts. After graduation, she taught mathematics.
Progressive ideas
In her college days, Sane was influenced by Marxism.
In 1927, while she was in college, a Muslim male student with the last name Khan and a Hindu female student with the last name Panandikar got married, and there was a furor, expressed by conservatives especially in the then-influential Marathi daily Pune Waibhawa (पुणें वैभव), about the interfaith marriage. Sane wrote her angry progressive response to the conservative furor.
As a feminist, she advocated a matriarchial system. She retained her last name Sane after marrying at age 26 a lawyer named Narasimha Dhagamwar, and advanced the same name retention idea for other women. She advocated that married women in Maharashtra do away with the strong social custom of their placing on their foreheads a kuṅkūṃ dot and wearing a mangalsootra as symbols of their holy matrimonial state.
Husband and daughter
In the late 1920s, Sane's future husband Dhagamwar had been an active participant in the Indian freedom movement, and the then British government ruling over India had charged him with participation in the 1929 Meerat conspiracy.
Sane's daughter Vasudha Dhagamwar has a law degree, and is a journalist and a civil liberties activist.
Authorship
Bharatiya Stree Jeewan (भारतीय स्त्रीजीवन) (1985) is a nonfictional work by Sane.
The following are some of her novels, most of which develop feminist themes.
- Nikhalati Hirakani (निखळती हिरकणी) (1935)
- Wathalela Wruksha (वठलेला वृक्ष) (1936)
- Hirawalikhali (हिरवळीखाली) (1936)
- Avishkar (आविष्कार) (1939)
- Pheriwala (फेरीवाला) (1939)
- Dhuke Ani Dahi.nwar (धुके आणि दहिंवर) (1942)
- Deepastambha (दीपस्तम्भ) (1950)
References
Sources
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Use dmy dates from August 2016
- Use Indian English from August 2016
- All Wikipedia articles written in Indian English
- Articles lacking in-text citations from July 2009
- All articles lacking in-text citations
- Articles with VIAF identifiers
- Articles with WorldCat Entities identifiers
- Articles with LCCN identifiers
- 1991 deaths
- 1907 births
- Indian feminist writers
- Women writers from Maharashtra
- Marathi-language writers
- 20th-century Indian women writers
- 20th-century Indian writers
- People from Amravati district