Her writings are hailed as a critique of social discrimination.ĭalit autobiography has joined protest poetry as a leading genre of Dalit Literature since the nineteen seventies. She is a prominent figure in the Dalit and feminist movements. Apart from The Weave of My Life she has published several short story collection which talk about the caste-class and gender axes in everyday life. Urmila Pawar is an Indian writer and activist, born in a Hindu Mahar family in Maharashtra. She delicately navigates her readers through her long journey from the harsh landscape of the Konkan region to Mumbai, first as a Mahar and later as a woman as she challenged the conventions of both caste and gender to emerge as an activist and strong literary voice. This paper explores the relevance of Dalit autobiography in the present scenario with particular reference to Urmila Pawar's autobiography The Weave of My Life: A Dalit Woman's Memoirs. In her memoir, Pawar not only shares her tireless efforts to surmount hideous personal tragedies but also conveys the excitement of an awakening consciousness among the Dalit community. Pawar narrates the pitiable tales of three generations of Dalit women driven deeper into invisibility by the patriarchy. Urmila Pawar’s autobiography Aaydan (The Weave of My Life: A Dalit Woman's Memoirs) is a moving saga of a socially deprived woman who fights all odds in life.
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