This blog reflects on the curious comfort society finds in older women’s voices in Kerala—a comfort often misread as feminist progress. I argue instead that this late-life acceptance betrays a deeper patriarchal anxiety. Drawing on feminist theory, I suggest that menopause operates as a socio-political threshold: women become audible only after their bodies are stripped of sexual threat and social unease. Using Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of symbolic capital, this blog tried to negotiate with how legitimacy is unevenly distributed among women based on caste, marital status, and compliance with normative femininity. Sara Ahmed’s notion of affective regulation explains why youthful women are marked as disruptive, while Judith Butler’s performativity helps frame menopause as a reconfiguration of gendered intelligibility. Dalit feminist critiques further expose the caste limits of this acceptance, revealing respectability as an exclusionary economy rather than a universal reward. Women a...
Capturing the Politics and Poetics of Everyday Life....
This space is dedicated to my father, who taught me to be bold, to stand up to power, and to remain faithful to one’s convictions—even when standing alone. What began in 2024 is a digital relic I carry forward: a space where my voice exists unedited. When thoughts feel too much for the world, this blog becomes a home for them. This is me—unfiltered, unfinished, and becoming Architect of Ideas, Sculptor of Minds and Storyteller of the Everyday.