fbpx
Wikipedia

Margaret Cousins

Margaret Elizabeth Cousins (née Gillespie, also known as Gretta Cousins; 7 November 1878 – 11 March 1954) was an Irish-Indian educationist, suffragist and Theosophist, who established All India Women's Conference (AIWC) in 1927.[1] She was the wife of poet and literary critic James Cousins, with whom she moved to India in 1915. She is credited with preserving the tune of the Indian National Anthem Jana Gana Mana based on the notes provided by Tagore himself in February 1919, during Rabindranath Tagore's visit to the Madanapalle College.[2] She was a member of the Flag Presentation Committee which presented the National Flag to the Constituent Assembly on 14 August 1947.[3]

Margaret Cousins
Margaret E. Cousins, 1932
Born
Margaret Elizabeth Gillespie

(1878-11-17)17 November 1878
Died11 March 1954(1954-03-11) (aged 75)
Adyar, Madras, India
(now Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India)
Occupation(s)Theosophist, educationist, suffragist, writer
Known forFounder and 11th president of All India Women's Conference
SpouseJames Cousins

Life

Margaret Gillespie, from an Irish Protestant family,[4] was born at Boyle, County Roscommon,[5] and educated locally and in Derry.[6] She studied music at the Royal University of Ireland in Dublin, graduating in 1902, and became a teacher. As a student she had met the poet and literary critic James Cousins, and she married him in 1903. The pair explored socialism, vegetarianism, and psychical research together. In 1906, after attending a National Conference of Women meeting in Manchester, Cousins joined the Irish branch of the NCW. In 1907 she and her husband attended the London Convention of the Theosophical Society, and she made contacts with suffragettes, vegetarians, anti-vivisectionists, and occultists in London.[4]

Cousins was a vegetarian and was a speaker for the Vegetarian Society in 1907. She was also involved with the Irish Vegetarian Society.[7] Cousins co-founded the Irish Women's Franchise League with Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington in 1908, serving as its first treasurer.[8] In 1910 she was one of six Dublin women attending the Parliament of Women, which attempted to march to the House of Commons to hand a resolution to the Prime Minister. After 119 women marching to the House of Commons had been arrested, 50 requiring medical treatment, the women decided to break the windows of the houses of Cabinet Ministers. Cousins was arrested and sentenced to a month in Holloway Prison.[4]

Vacationing with W. B. Yeats in 1912, Cousins and her husband heard Yeats read translations of poems by Rabindranath Tagore. In 1913, breaking the windows of Dublin Castle on the reading of the Second Home Rule Bill, Cousins and other suffragists were arrested and sentenced to one month in Tullamore Jail. The women demanded to be treated as political prisoners, and went on hunger strike to achieve release.[4]

In 1913, she and her husband moved to Liverpool, where James Cousins worked in a vegetarian food factory. In 1915 they moved to India. James Cousins initially worked for New India, the newspaper founded by Annie Besant; after Besant was forced to dismiss him for an article praising the Easter Uprising, she appointed him Vice-Principal of the new Madanapalle College, where Margaret taught English.[4]

In 1916, she became the first non-Indian member of the Indian Women's University at Poona.[6] In 1917 Cousins co-founded the Women's Indian Association with Annie Besant and Dorothy Jinarajadasa. She edited the WIA's journal, Stri Dharma.[4] In 1919–20 Cousins was the first Head of the National Girls' School at Mangalore. In 1922, she became the first woman magistrate in India. In 1927, she co-founded the All India Women's Conference, serving as its President in 1936.[4]

In 1932, she was arrested and jailed for speaking against the Emergency Measures.[6] By the late 1930s she felt conscious of the need to give way to indigenous Indian feminists:

I longed to be in the struggle, but I had the feeling that direct participation by me was no longer required, or even desired by the leaders of India womanhood who were now coming to the front.[9]

She was a member of the Flag Presentation Committee, which was a committee of 74 Indian women led by Hansa Mehta at the Constituent Assembly. The committee presented the National Flag of India on behalf of the women of India to the House on 14 August 1947.[10][3]

A stroke left Cousins paralysed from 1944 onwards. She received financial support from the Madras government, and later Jawaharlal Nehru, in recognition of her services to India.[6] She died in 1954. Her manuscripts are dispersed in various collections across the world.[11]

Works

  • The Awakening of Asian Womanhood, 1922
  • The music of Orient and Occident; essays towards mutual understandings, 1935
  • Indian womanhood today, 1941
  • (with James Cousins) We Two Together, Madras: Ganesh, 1950

See also

References

  1. ^ History 18 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine AIWC website.
  2. ^ "Home". 1950.
  3. ^ a b "CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY OF INDIA DEBATES (PROCEEDINGS)- VOLUME V: PRESENTATION OF THE NATIONAL FLAG" (PDF). loksabha.nic.in. Lok Sabha. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Kum Jayawardena (1995). The White Woman's Other Burden: Western Women and South Asia During British Rule. Taylor & Francis. pp. 147–155. ISBN 978-0-415-91104-7. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  5. ^ "Irish Genealogy". civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d Jennifer S. Uglow, ed. (1999). The Northeastern Dictionary of Women's Biography. Maggy Hendry. UPNE. p. 140. ISBN 978-1-55553-421-9. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  7. ^ Leneman, Leah (June 1997). "The awakened instinct: vegetarianism and the women's suffrage movement in Britain". Women's History Review. 6 (2): 271–287. doi:10.1080/09612029700200144. ISSN 0961-2025. S2CID 144004487.
  8. ^ Peter Gordon; David Doughan (2005). Dictionary of British Women's Organisations. Taylor & Francis. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-7130-4045-6. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  9. ^ Margaret Cousins and James Cousins, We Two-Together, 1950, p.746. Quoted in Jayawardena.
  10. ^ "Flag presented". The Hindu. 14 August 2015.
  11. ^ Alan Denson, ed. (1967). James H. Cousins (1873–1956) and Margaret E. Cousins (1878–1954): A Bio-bibliographical Survey. Kendal: published by the author. Retrieved 10 October 2012.

Further reading

  • Ramusack, Barbara N. (2004). "Cousins, Margaret Elizabeth (1878–1954)". In Cannadine, David (ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/46323.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link) (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Ramusack, Barbara N. (1981), "Catalysts or helpers? British feminists, Indian women's rights, and Indian independence", in Minault, Gail (ed.), The extended family: women and political participation in India and Pakistan, Columbia, Missouri: South Asia Books, pp. 109–150, ISBN 9780836407655.
  • Ramusack, Barbara N. (1990). "Cultural missionaries, maternal imperialists, feminist allies: British women activists in India, 1865–1945". Women's Studies International Forum. 13 (4): 309–321. doi:10.1016/0277-5395(90)90028-V.
  • Ramusack, Barbara N. (Fall 1989). "Embattled advocates: The debate over birth control in India, 1920-1940". Journal of Women's History. 1 (2): 34–64. doi:10.1353/jowh.2010.0005. S2CID 144635807.
  • Candy, Catherine (1994). "Relating feminisms, nationalisms and imperialisms: Ireland, India and Margaret Cousins's sexual politics". Women's History Review. 3 (4): 581–594. doi:10.1080/09612029400200066.
  • Candy, Catherine (1996). The occult feminism of Margaret Cousins in modern Ireland and India, 1878–1954 (Ph.D.). Loyola University of Chicago. OCLC 35053040.
  • Candy, Catherine (2001). "Margaret Cousins 1878–1954". In Cullen, Mary; Luddy, Maria (eds.). Female activists: Irish women and change 1900-1960. Dublin: Woodfield Press. pp. 113–141. ISBN 9780953429301.
  • Candy, Catherine (January–February 2009). "Mystical internationalism in Margaret Cousins's feminist world". Women's Studies International Forum. 32 (1): 29–34. doi:10.1016/j.wsif.2009.01.003.
  • Candy, Catherine (2007). "'Untouchability', vegetarianism and the suffragist ideology of Margaret Cousins". In Ryan, Louise; Ward, Margaret (eds.). Irish women and the vote: Becoming citizens. Dublin: Irish Academic Press. pp. 154–171. ISBN 9780716533931.
  • Candy, Catherine (Spring 2001). "The inscrutable Irish-Indian feminist management of Anglo-American hegemony, 1917-1947". Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History. 2 (1): 1–28. doi:10.1353/cch.2001.0003. S2CID 162101371.
  • Candy, Catherine (2007). "'Untouchability', vegetarianism and the suffragist ideology of Margaret Cousins". In Ryan, Louise; Ward, Margaret (eds.). Irish women and the vote: Becoming citizens. Dublin: Irish Academic Press. pp. 154–171. ISBN 9780716533931.
  • Candy, Catherine (2000), "Competing transnational representations of the 1930s Indian franchise question", in Fletcher, Ian Christopher; Nym Mayhall, Laura E.; Levine, Philippa (eds.), Women's suffrage in the British Empire: citizenship, nation, and race, London New York: Routledge, pp. 191–207, ISBN 9780415208055.
  • Munro, Keith (2018). Through the Eyes of Margaret Cousins: Irish and Indian Suffragette (PDF). Hive Studio Books. ISBN 9781999347918.

margaret, cousins, american, editor, writer, editor, margaret, elizabeth, cousins, née, gillespie, also, known, gretta, cousins, november, 1878, march, 1954, irish, indian, educationist, suffragist, theosophist, established, india, women, conference, aiwc, 192. For the American editor and writer see Margaret Cousins editor Margaret Elizabeth Cousins nee Gillespie also known as Gretta Cousins 7 November 1878 11 March 1954 was an Irish Indian educationist suffragist and Theosophist who established All India Women s Conference AIWC in 1927 1 She was the wife of poet and literary critic James Cousins with whom she moved to India in 1915 She is credited with preserving the tune of the Indian National Anthem Jana Gana Mana based on the notes provided by Tagore himself in February 1919 during Rabindranath Tagore s visit to the Madanapalle College 2 She was a member of the Flag Presentation Committee which presented the National Flag to the Constituent Assembly on 14 August 1947 3 Margaret CousinsMargaret E Cousins 1932BornMargaret Elizabeth Gillespie 1878 11 17 17 November 1878Boyle County Roscommon IrelandDied11 March 1954 1954 03 11 aged 75 Adyar Madras India now Chennai Tamil Nadu India Occupation s Theosophist educationist suffragist writerKnown forFounder and 11th president of All India Women s ConferenceSpouseJames Cousins Contents 1 Life 2 Works 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingLife EditMargaret Gillespie from an Irish Protestant family 4 was born at Boyle County Roscommon 5 and educated locally and in Derry 6 She studied music at the Royal University of Ireland in Dublin graduating in 1902 and became a teacher As a student she had met the poet and literary critic James Cousins and she married him in 1903 The pair explored socialism vegetarianism and psychical research together In 1906 after attending a National Conference of Women meeting in Manchester Cousins joined the Irish branch of the NCW In 1907 she and her husband attended the London Convention of the Theosophical Society and she made contacts with suffragettes vegetarians anti vivisectionists and occultists in London 4 Cousins was a vegetarian and was a speaker for the Vegetarian Society in 1907 She was also involved with the Irish Vegetarian Society 7 Cousins co founded the Irish Women s Franchise League with Hanna Sheehy Skeffington in 1908 serving as its first treasurer 8 In 1910 she was one of six Dublin women attending the Parliament of Women which attempted to march to the House of Commons to hand a resolution to the Prime Minister After 119 women marching to the House of Commons had been arrested 50 requiring medical treatment the women decided to break the windows of the houses of Cabinet Ministers Cousins was arrested and sentenced to a month in Holloway Prison 4 Vacationing with W B Yeats in 1912 Cousins and her husband heard Yeats read translations of poems by Rabindranath Tagore In 1913 breaking the windows of Dublin Castle on the reading of the Second Home Rule Bill Cousins and other suffragists were arrested and sentenced to one month in Tullamore Jail The women demanded to be treated as political prisoners and went on hunger strike to achieve release 4 In 1913 she and her husband moved to Liverpool where James Cousins worked in a vegetarian food factory In 1915 they moved to India James Cousins initially worked for New India the newspaper founded by Annie Besant after Besant was forced to dismiss him for an article praising the Easter Uprising she appointed him Vice Principal of the new Madanapalle College where Margaret taught English 4 In 1916 she became the first non Indian member of the Indian Women s University at Poona 6 In 1917 Cousins co founded the Women s Indian Association with Annie Besant and Dorothy Jinarajadasa She edited the WIA s journal Stri Dharma 4 In 1919 20 Cousins was the first Head of the National Girls School at Mangalore In 1922 she became the first woman magistrate in India In 1927 she co founded the All India Women s Conference serving as its President in 1936 4 In 1932 she was arrested and jailed for speaking against the Emergency Measures 6 By the late 1930s she felt conscious of the need to give way to indigenous Indian feminists I longed to be in the struggle but I had the feeling that direct participation by me was no longer required or even desired by the leaders of India womanhood who were now coming to the front 9 She was a member of the Flag Presentation Committee which was a committee of 74 Indian women led by Hansa Mehta at the Constituent Assembly The committee presented the National Flag of India on behalf of the women of India to the House on 14 August 1947 10 3 A stroke left Cousins paralysed from 1944 onwards She received financial support from the Madras government and later Jawaharlal Nehru in recognition of her services to India 6 She died in 1954 Her manuscripts are dispersed in various collections across the world 11 Works EditThe Awakening of Asian Womanhood 1922 The music of Orient and Occident essays towards mutual understandings 1935 Indian womanhood today 1941 with James Cousins We Two Together Madras Ganesh 1950See also EditList of suffragists and suffragettes List of women s rights activists Timeline of women s rights other than voting Timeline of women s suffrage Women s suffrage organisationsReferences Edit History Archived 18 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine AIWC website Home 1950 a b CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY OF INDIA DEBATES PROCEEDINGS VOLUME V PRESENTATION OF THE NATIONAL FLAG PDF loksabha nic in Lok Sabha Retrieved 24 January 2023 a b c d e f g Kum Jayawardena 1995 The White Woman s Other Burden Western Women and South Asia During British Rule Taylor amp Francis pp 147 155 ISBN 978 0 415 91104 7 Retrieved 10 October 2012 Irish Genealogy civilrecords irishgenealogy ie Retrieved 16 August 2020 a b c d Jennifer S Uglow ed 1999 The Northeastern Dictionary of Women s Biography Maggy Hendry UPNE p 140 ISBN 978 1 55553 421 9 Retrieved 10 October 2012 Leneman Leah June 1997 The awakened instinct vegetarianism and the women s suffrage movement in Britain Women s History Review 6 2 271 287 doi 10 1080 09612029700200144 ISSN 0961 2025 S2CID 144004487 Peter Gordon David Doughan 2005 Dictionary of British Women s Organisations Taylor amp Francis p 66 ISBN 978 0 7130 4045 6 Retrieved 10 October 2012 Margaret Cousins and James Cousins We Two Together 1950 p 746 Quoted in Jayawardena Flag presented The Hindu 14 August 2015 Alan Denson ed 1967 James H Cousins 1873 1956 and Margaret E Cousins 1878 1954 A Bio bibliographical Survey Kendal published by the author Retrieved 10 October 2012 Further reading EditRamusack Barbara N 2004 Cousins Margaret Elizabeth 1878 1954 In Cannadine David ed Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 46323 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint postscript link Subscription or UK public library membership required Ramusack Barbara N 1981 Catalysts or helpers British feminists Indian women s rights and Indian independence in Minault Gail ed The extended family women and political participation in India and Pakistan Columbia Missouri South Asia Books pp 109 150 ISBN 9780836407655 Ramusack Barbara N 1990 Cultural missionaries maternal imperialists feminist allies British women activists in India 1865 1945 Women s Studies International Forum 13 4 309 321 doi 10 1016 0277 5395 90 90028 V Ramusack Barbara N Fall 1989 Embattled advocates The debate over birth control in India 1920 1940 Journal of Women s History 1 2 34 64 doi 10 1353 jowh 2010 0005 S2CID 144635807 Candy Catherine 1994 Relating feminisms nationalisms and imperialisms Ireland India and Margaret Cousins s sexual politics Women s History Review 3 4 581 594 doi 10 1080 09612029400200066 Candy Catherine 1996 The occult feminism of Margaret Cousins in modern Ireland and India 1878 1954 Ph D Loyola University of Chicago OCLC 35053040 Candy Catherine 2001 Margaret Cousins 1878 1954 In Cullen Mary Luddy Maria eds Female activists Irish women and change 1900 1960 Dublin Woodfield Press pp 113 141 ISBN 9780953429301 Candy Catherine January February 2009 Mystical internationalism in Margaret Cousins s feminist world Women s Studies International Forum 32 1 29 34 doi 10 1016 j wsif 2009 01 003 Candy Catherine 2007 Untouchability vegetarianism and the suffragist ideology of Margaret Cousins In Ryan Louise Ward Margaret eds Irish women and the vote Becoming citizens Dublin Irish Academic Press pp 154 171 ISBN 9780716533931 Candy Catherine Spring 2001 The inscrutable Irish Indian feminist management of Anglo American hegemony 1917 1947 Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History 2 1 1 28 doi 10 1353 cch 2001 0003 S2CID 162101371 Candy Catherine 2007 Untouchability vegetarianism and the suffragist ideology of Margaret Cousins In Ryan Louise Ward Margaret eds Irish women and the vote Becoming citizens Dublin Irish Academic Press pp 154 171 ISBN 9780716533931 Candy Catherine 2000 Competing transnational representations of the 1930s Indian franchise question in Fletcher Ian Christopher Nym Mayhall Laura E Levine Philippa eds Women s suffrage in the British Empire citizenship nation and race London New York Routledge pp 191 207 ISBN 9780415208055 Munro Keith 2018 Through the Eyes of Margaret Cousins Irish and Indian Suffragette PDF Hive Studio Books ISBN 9781999347918 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Margaret Cousins amp oldid 1136930636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.