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Eve’s Weekly Vol 33, No 19(Special Issue), May 12-18, 1979

 Item
Identifier: AJ-002-01-89

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The Ammu Joseph Collection currently contains 179 Eve's Weekly magazines. Eve’s Weekly began publication in 1949 in Bombay (now Mumbai), published by the Somani group. This collection brings together magazines between the late 1970s and early 1980s. The magazine is an invaluable historical record of post-Independence India’s print culture, gender politics, and middle-class social life. Published for several decades and widely read across urban India, the magazine documented changing ideas of femininity, work, marriage, fashion, domesticity, sexuality, and citizenship. It brought together journalism, fiction, advice columns, photo-features, advertisements, film coverage, and reader correspondence, offering historians rich insight into the everyday worlds and aspirations of women readers. The magazine is also significant for tracing the development of women’s journalism and feminist public discourse in India, especially in the decades before the expansion of television and digital media. As both a commercial publication and a site of debate about modernity, consumption, family, and women’s autonomy, Eve’s Weekly provides a rare archive of social change, visual culture, and popular public conversation in twentieth-century India.

Dates

  • Creation: May 12-18, 1979

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Access Level

Full Extent

From the Collection: 2.5 Gigabytes

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Table of Contents:The Need For Men’s Liberation, by Razia Ismail. The Indian Male In Folklore, by Saraswati Swaminathan. Bringing Up Fathers, by Govind Shahani. Male Purveyors of Sick Humour, by Lata Mani. Rape Man's Power Weapon? by Meher Pestonji. Eve-Teasing: The Mainly Sport by Jyoti Punwani. Male Sexuality: Do not touch, by Sunil Shanbag. Sexual Frustrations in the Male, by Anurag Mathur. The Peacock Preens!, by Fleming Rodrigues. Men in Crisis, by Carlos Welch. The Myth and the Reality of: The Hen-Pecked Husband, by Aneel Khanna. The Ultimate Calamity, by A. Virendra Luther.

Source

Repository Details

Part of the NLS Law and Society Archives Repository

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