Sultana's Dream
Sultana's Dream is a 1905 feminist utopian story written by Rokeya Sakhawat Hussain, a Muslim feminist, writer and social reformer from India.[1][2] It was published in the same year in Madras based English periodical The Indian Ladies Magazine.[3] The word sultana here means a female sultan, a Muslim ruler.[4]
It depicts a feminist utopia (called Lady land) in which women run everything and men are secluded, in a mirror-image of the traditional practice of purdah. The women are aided by science fiction-esque "electrical" technology which enables labor less farming and flying cars; the women scientists have discovered how to trap solar power and control the weather. This results in "a sort of gender-based Planet of the Apes where the roles are reversed and the men are locked away in a technologically advanced future."[4]
There, traditional stereotypes such as “Men have bigger brains” and women are "naturally weak" are countered with logic such as "an elephant also has a bigger and heavier brain" and “a lion is stronger than a man” and yet no one dominates men.[3] In Lady land crime is eliminated, since men were considered responsible for all of it. The workday is only two hours long, since men used to waste six hours of each day in smoking. The religion is one of love and truth. Purity is held above all, such that the list of "sacred relations" (mahram) is widely extended.
See also
- Indian English literature
- Social reformers of India
- The Begum's Fortune, an 1879 utopian science fiction novel by Jules Verne
References
- ↑ "Sultana's Dream". feministpress.org. feministpress.org. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
- ↑ D. Bandyopadhyay. "স্বপনচারিনী: চিনিতে পারিনি? (Dream-Lady: Can't I Re-Cognize? (Begum Rokeya's Sultana's Dream))". academia.edu.
- 1 2 Rafia Zakaria. "The manless world of Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain". dawn.com. dawn.com. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
- 1 2 Nesrine Malik (30 July 2009). "What happened to Arab science fiction?". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 January 2010.
External links
- The full text of Sultana's Dream at Wikisource
- Text of Sultana's Dream (pdf, with line numbers)
- Text of Sultana's Dream