Servile Subjects and Resistant Voices: Representations of Women in Postcolonial Feminist Fiction
Abstract
This study investigates the representation of women as servile subjects in postcolonial feminist fiction and examines the multifaceted ways in which female characters resist patriarchal and colonial oppression. Drawing upon a qualitative thematic and narrative analysis of five novels, The Joys of Motherhood, Nervous Conditions, Purple Hibiscus, The God of Small Things, and Cracking India the research explores how servility is constructed through domestic, economic, religious, and bodily subjugation. Framed by postcolonial feminist theory and informed by concepts of subalternity, intersectionality, and linguistic resistance, the study reveals that these works not only expose women’s marginalization but also articulate pathways of resistance, often through nuanced and symbolic acts. Narrative structures, such as fragmented timelines, shifting perspectives, and minimalist prose, are employed as political tools to challenge dominant discourses and re-center female subjectivity. The findings emphasize that postcolonial feminist fiction functions as both critique and reclamation, providing critical insight into the lived experiences of women in postcolonial societies and contributing to global feminist thought grounded in cultural specificity.
How to Cite This Article
Said Ali, Muhammad Rizwan, Shahzad Mehmood, Kanwal Sajjad, Kinza Fatima, Ayesha Iqbal (2025). Servile Subjects and Resistant Voices: Representations of Women in Postcolonial Feminist Fiction . Journal of Frontiers in Multidisciplinary Research (JFMR), 6(1), 235-239. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54660/.IJFMR.2025.6.1.235-239