The concern
in both nineteenth-century Europe and India about women reading novels bore
more or less similar fears. Women were seen as easily corruptible and an
imaginary world that the novel provided was seen as a dangerous opening for the
imaginations of its readers. In certain Indian communities, it was felt that
women who read novels would leave their domestic environments and aspire to be
part of the outside world- the male domain.
This suggests that women were viewed as delicate and incapable of being
independent. They were merely expected to marry a man who could take care of
their financial needs while they maintained his household and remained
subservient to him.