​Reels, rotis and the rise of the desi tradwives

Mohua DasTNN
Mar 21, 2026 | 21:22 IST
Tanishkka Tiwari, 22, from Madhya Pradesh, makes content on homemaking routines, puja prep, rituals, dates with mother-in-law, temple visits and the aesthetics of domestic calm

The western phenomenon is now getting a local twist as bahu influencers turn their chai-and-chulha routines into aspirational and monetised content ​

Last Aug, the Cambridge Dictionary did what Instagram had already been doing with gusto. It formalised ‘tradwife’. The word — a tidy portmanteau of ‘traditional’ and ‘wife’ — emerged from Western corners as an online subculture of young married women romanticising mid-century domesticity of cooking from scratch, keeping house, raising children, being god-fearing and presenting the husband as undisputed breadwinner. A nostalgic 1950s ideal that is currently trending. Controversially.

A quick caveat before anyone reaches for the belan. There is nothing inherently suspect about a woman choosing to be a homemaker. Nor about men who do, although that’s a rarer species. But ‘tradwives’ are a more curated offshoot that warrants a closer look.
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