Book Description
This book endeavours to test two opposing arguments about the meaning of the term caste.
Author : Edmund Ronald Leach
Publisher : CUP Archive
Page : 160 pages
File Size : 20,82 MB
Release : 1960
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780521096645
This book endeavours to test two opposing arguments about the meaning of the term caste.
Author : Sumit Guha
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 256 pages
File Size : 35,44 MB
Release : 2013-09-12
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9004254854
'Caste' is today almost universally perceived as an ancient and unchanging Hindu institution preserved solely by a deep-seated religious ideology. Yet the word itself is an importation from sixteenth-century Europe. This book tracks the long history of the practices amalgamated under this label and shows their connection to changing patterns of social and political power down to the present. It frames caste as an involuted and complex form of ethnicity and explains why it persisted under non-Hindu rulers and in non-Hindu communities across South Asia.
Author : Christopher John Baker
Publisher : Springer
Page : 246 pages
File Size : 32,13 MB
Release : 1976-06-18
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 1349027464
Author : Kalinga Tudor Silva
Publisher :
Page : 180 pages
File Size : 32,86 MB
Release : 2009
Category : Caste
ISBN : 9789556591552
Author : Surinder S. Jodhka
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 689 pages
File Size : 32,26 MB
Release : 2023-10-16
Category : Religion
ISBN : 0198896719
The Oxford Handbook of Caste brings together a wide range of essays encompassing various academic disciplines to lay the foundations for a new understanding of caste, capturing emerging research trends, imaginations, and the lived realities of caste.
Author : Balmurli Natrajan
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 233 pages
File Size : 11,9 MB
Release : 2011-07-20
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 1136647570
In India, caste groups ensure their durability in an era of multiculturalism by officially representing caste as cultural difference or ethnicity rather than as unequal descent-based relations. Challenging dominant social theories of caste, this book addresses questions of how caste survives the system that gave rise to it and adapts to new demands of capitalism and democracy. Based on original fieldwork, the book shows how the terrain of culture captured by a new grammar of caste revitalizes castes as cultural communities so that the culture of a caste is produced, organized and naturalized in the process of transforming jati (fetishized blood and kinship) into samaj (fetishized culture). Castes are shown to not be homogenous cultural wholes but sites of hegemony where class, gender and hierarchy over-determine the meanings and materiality of caste. Arguing that there exists a new casteism in India akin to a new racism in the USA, built less on biology and descent and more on purported cultural differences and their rights to exist, the book presents an extended critique and a search for an alternative view of caste and anti-casteist politics. It is of interest to students and scholars of South Asian culture and society.
Author : Jonathan P. Parry
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 376 pages
File Size : 42,8 MB
Release : 2013-09-13
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1136545859
This study is a major addition to understanding the problems of social inequality and the nature of caste and kinship. A full account is given of the social structure of the region, emphasizing the continuity of principles, which govern relations between castes and relationships within castes. The ethnographic data bear in particular on: the nature of untouchability; models of caste ranking; the way in which 'traditional' family structures adapt to a diversification of the economy and the debate about the 'instability' of regimes of generalized exchange. Originally published in 1979.
Author : Joel Lee
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 356 pages
File Size : 26,24 MB
Release : 2021-06-10
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1108967078
The idea that India is a Hindu majority nation rests on the assumption that the vast swath of its population stigmatized as 'untouchable' is, and always has been, in some meaningful sense, Hindu. But is that how such communities understood themselves in the past, or how they understand themselves now? When and under what conditions did this assumption take shape, and what truths does it conceal? In this book, Joel Lee challenges presuppositions at the foundation of the study of caste and religion in South Asia. Drawing on detailed archival and ethnographic research, Lee tracks the career of a Dalit religion and the effort by twentieth-century nationalists to encompass it within a newly imagined Hindu body politic. A chronicle of religious life in north India and an examination of the ethics and semiotics of secrecy, Deceptive Majority throws light on the manoeuvres by which majoritarian projects are both advanced and undermined.
Author : Pnina Werbner
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 412 pages
File Size : 15,50 MB
Release : 2020-06-24
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1000184862
This study, which breaks new ground in urban research, is a comprehensive and definitive account of one of the many communities of South Asians to emerge throughout the Western industrial world since the Second World War - the British Pakistanis in Manchester. This book examines the cultural dimensions of immigrant entrepreneurship and the formation of an ethnic enclave community, and explores the structure and theory of urban ritual and its place within the immigrant gift economy.
Author : Brian Stoddart
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 184 pages
File Size : 15,48 MB
Release : 2014-03-14
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 1317809742
This book explains how access to and use of land, water and language helped shape Andhra politics in India from 1850 down to the present day. After independence, the debate over land reform and policies on irrigation has shaped the fortunes of various governments, while the debate over the make-up of the language-based state has stimulated separatist movements like the one in support of Telangana. The book discusses how British innovations in irrigation in coastal Andhra in the mid-nineteenth century transformed the economy there from food crops to cash crops, and created new markets for local entrepreneurs. This stimulated increased education and social reform in the region, which in turn supported new politics in search of constitutional concessions. The drive for a Telugu language-based province then arose in concert, and those political resources were then used to determine local patterns down to independence. The 1930s ruse of the socialists, then the communist organisations, was an extension of land and water tax debates, which impacted the political nature of development — both before and after — independence. This is one of the first books on Andhra that recounts this story and is based on extensive archival research exploring the deep relationships between land, water, language and politics. It would be of primary interest to those studying modern nationalism in India, natural resource management, Indian politics and economic growth.