When the Subaltern Speaks: Subverting Power Structures in Mahasweta Devi’s “Dhouli”

ShodhPatra: International Journal of Science and Humanities

ShodhPatra: International Journal of Science and Humanities

A Peer-Reviewed & Refereed International Multidisciplinary Monthly Journal

Call For Paper - Volume - 3 Issue - 3 (March 2026)

DOI: 10.70558/SPIJSH

Follows UGC Care Guidelines

Article Title

When the Subaltern Speaks: Subverting Power Structures in Mahasweta Devi’s “Dhouli”

Author(s) Neha.
Country India
Abstract

This paper reads Mahasweta Devi’s short story “Dhouli” as a text that brings a silenced, subaltern subject into the field of representation and thereby challenges the power structures that sustain her marginalization. Using Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s theoretical idea of the “subaltern”,the paper argues that Devi not only uses narrative perspective, characterization, and social detail to make Dhouli’s suffering visible,she also complicates the idea that the subaltern can be simply “given a voice” by elite discourses. The analysis shows how Dhouli documents everyday injustices (rape, abandonment, starvation, social ostracism) and stages small acts of resistance that unsettle the logic of caste, patriarchy, and class. The story performs a kind of ethical witnessing as it refuses to reduce Dhouli to a passive object of pity and compels readers to recognise the structural causes of her suffering and the agency she exercises in survival and refusal.

Area Gender Studies
Issue Volume 3, Issue 3 (March 2026)
Published 2026/03/12
How to Cite Neha, (2026). When the Subaltern Speaks: Subverting Power Structures in Mahasweta Devi’s “Dhouli”. ShodhPatra: International Journal of Science and Humanities, 3(3), 158-164, DOI: https://doi.org/10.70558/SPIJSH.2026.v3.i3.45572.
DOI 10.70558/SPIJSH.2026.v3.i3.45572

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