The final element of the special section on the Nepali women's movement is two reference bibliographies compiled by the editors, one of work in English (and a few German and French entries), one of work in Nepali. The English bibliography concentrates on items published in the past decade but also includes some earlier studies. It contains a mix of books, journal and magazine articles, theses, and development reports. Concentration on recent work is intended to give us all at least a general picture of the kinds of things being written about Nepali women these days. Inclusion of some older work allows us to notice both persistent themes (measurement of the fertility of female Nepali bodies for example) and shifts of attention over time (the recent rise in attention to Nepali women and girls being sold into prostitution in India for example). It also serves as a reminder of some of what has already been said. Thus where older work is concerned we have tended to include less well known studies (other CEDA reports, for example, rather than the already well known Status of Women series). We have also made an effort to include, along with recent theses, older ones that have not, to our knowledge, had their main contents published in book form. Keeping track of what has been said in the past, and in disparate venues (e.g., academic and non-academic; in-house NGO/INGO reports versus published sources) has value not only for historical study of representations of Nepali women, but also as an aid to assessing current work - what's new, what's being repeated? Moreover, some older studies and work published in venues that are, in Nepal, obscure (which includes many academic journals published abroad) may have new relevance today. During the debate over women's property rights of the past few years, the virtual absence of reference to the many studies of women conducted during and since the UN-declared "Decade for Women" has been very striking. Thus we have made an effort to include works of many kinds on marriage and those on kinship that make substantial reference to women. If this work has no relevance to the debate over property rights, then something is amiss within the domain of social science. If it has relevance but its authors, or others, are failing to bring it to bear on the controversy, then something is amiss in the relation between academic research and public sphere activism. Of course, what is needed is not just a list of these publications, but rather the studies themselves. We invite any author represented here (and those we may have missed) to send copies of their publications to SINHAS (Mandala Book Point, GPO Box 528, Kathmandu). They will be deposited in the Martin Chautari library in Thapathali, which is made available to local researchers, journalists and students.
The Nepali language bibliography also includes a preponderance of recent writings, but ventures further into the past on the view that foreign researchers will be less familiar with this body of work. There is the same mixture of materials as in the English bibliography, with the addition of significant representation of literature. This is because literature has been one of the genres that contains the most keen observations of the social situations of Nepali women. Again, this is not a comprehensive bibliography, but provides a good initial guide into many terrains that anyone who wishes to gain a deeper understanding of Nepali women's movements and the challenges they face, would want to explore.
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