'You don't just do it because someone else said so': Menstrual practices and women's agency in the Hindu diaspora of Trinidad

Cult Health Sex. 2022 Jun;24(6):827-841. doi: 10.1080/13691058.2021.1887938. Epub 2021 Mar 5.

Abstract

Meanings of menstruation are deeply embedded in culture and religion. The current dominant narrative presents menstrual practices as restrictions and often describes Hindu women as 'subjected to' these practices, characterising them as the oppressed victims of their religion. This article seeks to complicate this oversimplified narrative by exploring women's motivations, choices and decisions related to menstrual practices in a small-scale study based on semi-structured interviews and focus groups with women in the Hindu-Trinidadian diaspora. Our findings indicate that the women we interviewed exercise agency in the cognitive, emotional, religious and socio-cultural spheres. Many of them accept the ritual 'impurity' but overwhelmingly restrict this label to the spiritual sphere and separate it from their menstruating bodies. Many reject the idea that the practices are restrictive or stigmatising. They do not understand religion as the source of menstrual stigma but instead value or accept menstrual practices as part of what it means to be a Hindu woman-motivated by religious observance and/or the desire to be part of a community that upholds tradition. These varied manifestations of women's agency challenge the understanding of menstrual practices as necessarily-and-always oppressive and call for acknowledging the nuance and complexity of women's lives.

Keywords: Hinduism; Trinidad; agency; diaspora; menstruation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Female
  • Hinduism* / psychology
  • Human Migration
  • Humans
  • Menstruation* / psychology
  • Religion
  • Trinidad and Tobago