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<title>Asst.Prof.Anu Zacharia</title>
<link>http://202.88.229.59:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2325</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-14T19:43:12Z</dc:date>
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<title>Deconstructing Female Stereotypes Through Espionage Fiction :Depiction of Female Spy in Harinder Sikka's "Calling Sehma"t</title>
<link>http://202.88.229.59:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2347</link>
<description>Deconstructing Female Stereotypes Through Espionage Fiction :Depiction of Female Spy in Harinder Sikka's "Calling Sehma"t
Zacharia, Anu
Society has assigned prescribed roles to men and women based on their assumed abilities and inabilities. Women are by &#13;
such notions considered physically weak, dependent, emotional, passive, lacking in opinion etc. Even with improved &#13;
status of women in the twenty first century, such stereotyping are preferred and propagated especially through &#13;
literature, cinema etc. The United Nations considers certain stereotyping a violation of human rights if it prevents a &#13;
person from personal growth and from enjoyment of fundamental freedom. Since its inception, espionage fiction has &#13;
been male oriented and dominated, with females playing a minor supporting role. They were often portrayed as objects &#13;
of sexual pleasure or damsels in distress completely dependent on the male. It was only towards the end of the twentieth &#13;
century that female spies began to appear as central characters in espionage fiction. Such characters broke the hitherto &#13;
accepted image of women in the genre by being bold, intelligent, ruthless, violent and active. Although less in number &#13;
in comparison with their male counterparts, female spies in literature also attained wide acceptance. This paper attempts &#13;
a study of the depiction of female spy in Harinder Sikka’s “Calling Sehmat”. As a work based on a real life spy, it is &#13;
much closer to reality and hence makes an interesting study than a work based on pure imagination.
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<dc:date>2018-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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