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Sri Lankan academic and activist (born 1931) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kumari Jayawardena (Sinhala: කුමාරි ජයවර්ධන; born 1931) is a Sri Lankan feminist activist and academic. Her work is part of the canon of Third-world feminism which conceptualizes feminist philosophies as indigenous and unique to non-Western societies and nations rather than offshoots of Western feminism. She has taught at the University of Colombo[1] and the International Institute of Social Studies.[2]
Kumari Jayawardena කුමාරි ජයවර්ධන | |
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Born | Agampodi Kumari Jayawardena 1931 (age 92–93) |
Nationality | Sri Lankan |
Education | Ladies' College, Colombo |
Alma mater | London School of Economics |
Occupation(s) | Academic, activist |
Notable work | Feminism and Nationalism in the Third World |
Parents |
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In the 1980s Jayawardena published Feminism and Nationalism in the Third World, which has become a classic work on non-Western women's movements. She has published other books including The White Woman's Other Burden and written many articles. She founded the Social Scientists' Association in the 1970s and plays an active role in Sri Lankan civil rights movements.
Jayawardena was born in Colombo in 1931, to a Sinhala father and a British mother, Eleanor Hutton.[3] His father Agampodi Torontal Paulus de Zoysa popularly known as A. P. de Zoysa was a prominent social reformer and academic of Sri Lanka. She studied at the Ladies' College[4] in Colombo and took a BA in Economics at the London School of Economics[5](LSE) between 1952 and 1955.[6] She was awarded the Certificat d'Etudes Politiques from the Institut d'etudes politiques de Paris (part of Sciences Po) in 1956. Having qualified as a barrister in 1958, she received a PhD from LSE in 1964 for her thesis on industrial relations.[6]
From 1969 until 1985, Jayawardena taught political science at the University of Colombo.[6] She also taught a course on women and development as a visiting scholar at the International Institute of Social Studies in The Hague.[7] In the 1980s, as she travelled between Brussels (where she lived) and The Hague (where she taught) Jayawardena wrote what would become Feminism and Nationalism in the Third World.[7] It is a guide to women's movements in China, Egypt, Iran, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Turkey and Vietnam.[8]
Jayawardena wanted to address the "gap about our part of the world" and felt that in order to "discuss the knowledge and status of women today, it is important to know what they have gained and how."[7] The book was selected for the Feminist Fortnight award in the United Kingdom in 1986.[6] Ms. Magazine called it one of the twenty most important books of the feminist decades in 1992.[6] This book is now regarded as a classic introduction to feminist movements and is widely used in Women's Studies programs around the world. Thirty years after its original publication, it was reissued by Verso Books.[7]
The White Woman's Other Burden, published in 1995, analyzes the actions of white women who challenged the gender roles set by the British occupation of South Asia. Jayawardena specifically looks at the work of Annie Besant, Helena Blavatsky, Katherine Mayo, Mirra Richard and Madeleine Slade.[9]
Jayawardena plays an active role in women's research organizations and civil rights movements in Sri Lanka. She founded the Social Scientists' Association in the 1970s and was still involved with it at the age of 85.[7] It is a group of concerned scholars working on ethnic, gender and caste.[10]
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