Summary of this article
- Media reduced Phoolan Devi to a sensational figure—sexualised, dramatised and stripped of structural context.
- Bandit Queen reinforced the revenge narrative, overshadowing caste realities and political transformation.
- Writers like Mala Sen reframed her as shaped by caste and institutional failure, but the myth still dominates public memory.
Phoolan Devi did not enter the public imagination as a person so much as a spectacle. Media accounts cast her simultaneously as outlaw, beauty, victim and avenger, lingering on her body as insistently as on her gun, until a life shaped by caste violence and gendered oppression was repackaged into a consumable myth of blood, dishonour and revenge. |