Encyclopedia of Hinduism

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women and Hinduism
Hinduism, because of its extreme diversity
throughout the ages, has encompassed complex
systems of thought and social hierarchies, which
defy any simple generalizations. This overview
of the status and role of women in Hindu India,
and of the culture’s attitudes toward them, reflects
that variety. It should be born in mind that social
correlates of gender, such as CASTE, class, stage of
life, age, and family membership, are all variables
that significantly affect the position of women in
Hindu society, so that women in Hinduism dem-
onstrate significant differences in their lives.
It is the case that in prehistory everywhere
there were significantly more autonomy and sex-
ual freedom for women (and men) than in later
times. There are indications, certainly, that in
pre-Vedic times in India (before 1500 B.C.E.), such
freedom and autonomy existed among the pre-
ARYAN tribal people who inhabited every corner
of India. Tribal groups such as the Santals to this
day do not restrict women’s sexuality and action
in any way as their more staid counterparts in the
larger culture do. Ancient Tamil poetry, dated as
early as 300 B.C.E., shows women freely choosing
sexual partners before marriage and relying upon
love marriages rather than family arrangements.

Also, groups such as the Nayars show that matri-
liny and matrilocality, which must be associated
with more supportive lives for women, were
probably fairly common in the Indian, pre-Aryan
substratum that provides the cultural undergird-
ing for much of later Hinduism.
A pattern develops, visible in the Brahminical
texts, of women’s having roles in the early Vedic
culture (1500–800 B.C.E.) that began to be denied
them even in the late Vedic period. Some RISHIs,
for instance, were arguably women, and in the
White YAJUR VEDA there are chants that can be
performed only by a woman who knows Sanskrit.
Though Hindu tradition even up to the present
day understands that women were never allowed
to recite the VEDAS or even witness a Vedic ritual,
these examples indicate that this rule was not
strictly observed in early Vedic tradition.
When hierarchies of society begin to be created
in association with the creation of historical cities
worldwide (in India beginning around 800 B.C.E.),
such social developments generally result in the
restriction of the rights of women. So was it in
India, where women began to be subjugated more
and more to family and husband and began to lose
their role as independent actors. But as soon as the
early urban period had come to fruition, perhaps

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