This chapter adopts fresh methodological and theoretical approaches in relation to transnationalism, power, and the work and writings of women actors in South Asian education in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. I incorporate theoretical approaches from sociology and literary studies, notably gendered social capital, literary activism, and analysis of fiction as sources for understanding the cultural history of women’s education. This chapter deepens the notion of gendered social capital so that it explicitly includes hierarchies of race, caste, and class as analytical differentials. The chapter analyzes how the literary activism of women actors in South Asian education created transnational grids of articulation. Case stud...