Treatment of Indian Women: A Comparative Study of Rama Mehta's Inside the Haveli and Shobha De's Snapshots

Arpna Choudhary *

Abstract

This article examines the varied treatment of Indian women in a male-chauvinistic society through a comparative study of Rama Mehta?s Inside the Haveli and Shobha De?s Snapshots. It explores the contrasting representations of women?s lives?Geeta?s confinement within the purdah system in an aristocratic haveli versus the urban, liberated, and self-assertive women portrayed by Shobha De. The study highlights issues such as patriarchy, gender discrimination, obedience, self-sacrifice, sexuality, economic independence, and women?s struggle for identity and autonomy. While Mehta presents compromise, tradition, and restricted freedom, De depicts women who challenge orthodox norms, assert individuality, and seek self-fulfilment. The article concludes that Indian women?s experiences vary widely across socio-cultural contexts, reflecting a transition from suppression to self-assertion in modern Indian society.

Keywords

Femininity physical bludgeon barrenness commercial artist

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Journal Information

The Interiors

Volume 8, Issue 1

ISSN: 2319-4804

Published: January 2019

Citation

Choudhary, A. (2026). "Treatment of Indian Women: A Comparative Study of Rama Mehta's Inside the Haveli and Shobha De's Snapshots". The Interiors, 8(1), pp. 159-166.

Corresponding Author

Arpna Choudhary

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