Brass Notebook

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A01=Devaki Jain
A23=Amartya Sen
A24=Gloria Steinem
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Author_Devaki Jain
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=BM
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Category=JBSF11
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
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Feminist economics
gender in India
gender inequality
gender pay gap
gender politics
household work
Language_English
memoir
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postwar politics
Price_€20 to €50
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second wave feminism
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third wave feminism
uncompensated labor
women's rights in South Asia

Product details

  • ISBN 9781620977941
  • Dimensions: 139 x 215mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Apr 2023
  • Publisher: The New Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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The lyrical and globe-spanning memoir by the influential feminist economist, with introductory pieces from two American icons

“Your heart and world will be opened by reading The Brass Notebook, the intimate and political life of Devaki Jain, a young woman who dares to become independent.” —Gloria Steinem

When she was barely thirty, the Indian feminist economist Devaki Jain befriended Doris Lessing, Nobel winner and author of The Golden Notebook, who encouraged Jain to write her story. Over half a century later, Jain has crafted what Desmond Tutu has called “a riveting account of the life story of a courageous woman who has all her life challenged what convention expects of her.”

Across an extraordinary life intertwined with those of Iris Murdoch, Gloria Steinem, Julius Nyerere, Henry Kissinger, and Nelson Mandela, Jain navigated a world determined to contain her ambitions. While still a young woman, she traveled alone across the subcontinent to meet Gandhi’s disciple Vinoba Bhave, hitchhiked around Europe in a sari, and fell in love with a Yugoslav at a Quaker camp in Saarbrücken. She attended Oxford University, supporting herself by washing dishes in a local café. Later, over the course of an influential career as an economist, Jain seized on the cause of feminism, championing the poor women who labored in the informal economy long before mainstream economics attended to questions of inequality.

With a foreword by Nobel Prize–winning economist Amartya Sen and an introduction by the well-known American feminist Gloria Steinem, whose own life and career were inspired by time spent with Jain, The Brass Notebook perfectly merges the political with the personal—a book full of life, ideas, politics, and history.

Devaki Jain is a graduate of Oxford University, where she is now an Honorary Fellow. A development economist and activist, she has held a wide range of academic and institutional positions and is the founder of several key organizations for women in the social sciences. The author of The Brass Notebook (The New Press), she lives in Delhi.

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