The androgynous warrior: Gandhi’s search for strength

European Journal of Political Theory 15 (4):404-423 (2016)
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Abstract

Gandhi’s conception of non-violence was unique in having martial and maternal elements. He drew upon the mythological figure of the noble warrior but he also stressed maternal capacity for love and endurance. The virtuous self-suffering woman and the Kshatriya warrior were the ideals that Gandhi shared with his militant Hindu nationalist opponents. By bringing together these two ideals in the combative non-violent soldier, Gandhi tried to invert his opponents’ hierarchy of values. He proposed that dying without enmity towards the adversary is more courageous than killing. The truth-force required to subdue the enmity of the adversary is generated from within oneself by overcoming fear, desires and attachments. Because of the male-centric nature of this overcoming, Gandhi’s break with the militant nationalists remained incomplete. The diverse elements drawn from various traditions did not blend in the figure of the non-violent soldier because Gandhi’s interpretations of these past ideas remained influenced by the masculinist anxieties of contemporary nationalism.

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Mahatma Gandhi--The Last Phase.Amiya Chakravarty & Pyarelal - 1962 - Philosophy East and West 11 (4):269-270.
Non-Violence and Aggression.H. J. N. Horsburgh - 1969 - Philosophy East and West 19 (4):463-464.
The Modernity of Tradition.Philip H. Ashby, Lloyd I. Rudolph & Susanne Hoeber Rudolph - 1969 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 89 (4):791.

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