Ostracism and Violence against Women: A Comparative Study of Blasphemy and Water

Anam Jabeen *

Abstract

This paper presents a feminist comparative study of Tehmina Durrani?s Blasphemy and Bapsi Sidhwa?s Water, examining how patriarchal power structures, cultural traditions, and religious distortions perpetuate violence and ostracism against women in South Asian societies. It explores practices such as child marriage, dowry, polygamy, honour-based crimes, marital rape, prostitution, widowhood, and the misuse of religion to legitimise female subjugation. Through the characters of Heer, Chuyia, Kalyani, and Shakuntala, the article highlights women?s physical, psychological, and sexual exploitation and argues that both novels expose patriarchal hypocrisy while advocating feminist resistance, dignity, and female agency.

Keywords

Violence ostracism patriarchy culture tradition religion feminism

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Journal Information

The Interiors

Volume 8, Issue 1

ISSN: 2319-4804

Published: January 2019

Citation

Jabeen, A. (2026). "Ostracism and Violence against Women: A Comparative Study of Blasphemy and Water". The Interiors, 8(1), pp. 183-190.

Corresponding Author

Anam Jabeen

Research Scholar, Department of English, Magadh University, Bodh-Gaya