Rape, commonly used as a weapon of war, was long seen as an inevitable by-product of battle. Recent research finds that war itself is gendered and that the implications and consequences of violence in battle differ for women and men. Against this backdrop, this article explores the issue of wartime rape during Bangladesh’s liberation movement against Pakistan in 1971. It examines the discourse surrounding the women who were raped in wartime and, after independence, awarded the title of “birangona” or “war heroine.” It explores the representation of the birangona in the postwar Bangladeshi media, the media’s role in challenging or reinforcing the discourse, and the implications of these for war heroines who lacked agency
Following the 1971 Bangladesh War, the Bangladesh government publicly designated the thousands of wo...
This article explores the abduction and murder of Kalpana Chakma, Organiz-ing Secretary of the Hill ...
The focus of this paper is to understand the construction of women in the war films of Bangladesh. A...
Rape, commonly used as a weapon of war, was long seen as an inevitable by-product of battle. Recent ...
The 1971 War of Bangladesh witnessed one of the worst incidents of gender-based violence in history ...
This article examines the relationship between aesthetics and politics when invoking the imagery of ...
In December 1971, East Pakistan became the independent nation of Bangladesh after a nine-month war w...
The year 1971 symbolizes an episode of a bloodbath in the history of South Asia. Popularly known as ...
This article presents an investigation of the forces of authority and co-option surrounding the docu...
Two decades ago, ‘1971’ was deemed to not have a market within Indian publishing houses and media ou...
In the postmodern era, one of the primary objectives of oral narratives is to tell the untold storie...
The most important and celebrated chapter in the history of Bangladesh is its nine-month long Libera...
This paper aims to examine the relationship between a Birangona, and the men of a patriarchal social...
When remembering the civil war between East and West Pakistan in 1971, most accounts are told from a...
The article aims to portray the traumas and sufferings of female war survivors in pre and post-1971 ...
Following the 1971 Bangladesh War, the Bangladesh government publicly designated the thousands of wo...
This article explores the abduction and murder of Kalpana Chakma, Organiz-ing Secretary of the Hill ...
The focus of this paper is to understand the construction of women in the war films of Bangladesh. A...
Rape, commonly used as a weapon of war, was long seen as an inevitable by-product of battle. Recent ...
The 1971 War of Bangladesh witnessed one of the worst incidents of gender-based violence in history ...
This article examines the relationship between aesthetics and politics when invoking the imagery of ...
In December 1971, East Pakistan became the independent nation of Bangladesh after a nine-month war w...
The year 1971 symbolizes an episode of a bloodbath in the history of South Asia. Popularly known as ...
This article presents an investigation of the forces of authority and co-option surrounding the docu...
Two decades ago, ‘1971’ was deemed to not have a market within Indian publishing houses and media ou...
In the postmodern era, one of the primary objectives of oral narratives is to tell the untold storie...
The most important and celebrated chapter in the history of Bangladesh is its nine-month long Libera...
This paper aims to examine the relationship between a Birangona, and the men of a patriarchal social...
When remembering the civil war between East and West Pakistan in 1971, most accounts are told from a...
The article aims to portray the traumas and sufferings of female war survivors in pre and post-1971 ...
Following the 1971 Bangladesh War, the Bangladesh government publicly designated the thousands of wo...
This article explores the abduction and murder of Kalpana Chakma, Organiz-ing Secretary of the Hill ...
The focus of this paper is to understand the construction of women in the war films of Bangladesh. A...