4.3 Article

COLORISM AS MARRIAGE CAPITAL: Cross-Region Marriage Migration in India and Dark-Skinned Migrant Brides

Journal

GENDER & SOCIETY
Volume 35, Issue 1, Pages 85-109

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0891243220979633

Keywords

India; colorism; gender; skin-whitening products; marriage migration; dowry; ethnocentrism; caste; patriarchy

Funding

  1. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Canada Doctoral Award [752 2014 2052]
  2. Royal Norwegian Embassy, New Delhi, India

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This article reveals how colorism not only leads to gender inequality in marriage but also contributes to noncustomary cross-region marriage migrations in India, affecting women's lives on a daily basis. Dispossession of matrimonial choice forces women to accept proposals from North Indian bachelors, leading to new forms of gender subordination and skin-tone discrimination within marriages.
This article, based on original research from 57 villages in four provinces from North and East India, sheds light on a hitherto unexplored gendered impact of colorism in facilitating noncustomary cross-region marriage migrations in India. Within socioeconomically marginalized groups from India's development peripheries, the hegemonic construct of fairness as capital conjoins with both regressive patriarchal gender norms governing marriage and female sexuality and the monetization of social relations, through dowry, to foreclose local marriage options for darker-hued women. This dispossession of matrimonial choice forces women to voluntarily accept marriage proposals from North Indian bachelors, who are themselves faced with a bride shortage in their own regions due to skewed sex ratios. These marriages condemn cross-region brides to new forms of gender subordination and skin-tone discrimination within the intimacy of their marriages, and in everyday relations with conjugal families, kin, and rural communities. Because of colorism, cross-region brides are exposed to caste-discriminatory exclusions and ethnocentric prejudice. Dark-skin shaming is a strategic ideological weapon employed to extract more labor from them. The article extends global scholarly discussion on the role of colorism in articulating new forms of gendered violence in dark-complexioned, poor rural women's lives.

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