Tribes, forest and social formation in Indian history
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Tribes, forest and social formation in Indian history
Manohar, 2004
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Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Universityグローバル専攻
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
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Note
"Indian History Congress"
Summary: Mostly revised versions of papers presented at the panel "Tribes, Forests, and Social Formation in Indian History" at the Bhopal Session (2001) of Indian History Congress
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Published in association with Indian History Congress. A comprehensive social history of tribes and forests in India is yet to be written. However, considerable research work has been done in the last few decades on the variations of social formation emanating from the relationship between tribes and forests in India. Questions multiplied over time. To what extent were the tribes or communities residing in forests living in isolation of peasant society? How far were they prudent in the use of forest resources in different periods? How did state formations affect natural resource exploitation and the respective social formations over time? What was the exact nature of colonial watershed in ecologic terms? How have the issues related to forest management and community rights been tackled in post-colonial years? In the wake of the emergence of subaltern studies in the 1980s and the ecological studies in the 1990s, a need was felt to approach these questions from new perspectives. The present volume, mainly combines revised versions of the papers presented at a Panel organized by the Indian History Congress in 2001. It includes twelve articles besides an Introduction by the editors.
It argues that since the 1970s old issues of economic development and social integration have given place to the new ones of community, culture, power, class and identity in recent years. The contributors represent multiple viewpoints, question old assumptions, revise them whenever possible and often take altogether new positions to stimulate academic interest to promote further studies and research on the subject.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- State's Perception of the 'Forest' & the 'Forest' as state in Early India
- Re-thinking Forest, Forest Dwellers & Ecological History
- From Tribe to Caste? The Koragas of South Canara
- Tribes, Forest, & Social Formation in Early South India
- Situating Tribals in the Early History of Orissa
- Adivasi & Aranyaka: Reconsidering Some Characterizations of Their Polity & Economy in Pre-colonial & Colonial India
- Reinterpreting Tribal Livelihood Systems: Underdevelopment & the Local Political Economy in Central India, 1800-1940
- Tribes, Soliders, & Social Change in Early Nineteenth Century Malwa
- Forest-Human Interface: The Forest Policy of the Native State of Cochin (1800-1947)
- Tribal Resistance in Chotanagpur: A Case Study of the Dubia Gossain Movement (1870-1880)
- Forests, Development Ideology & Peasant/Tribal Life-World: Madras Presidency, Nineteenth & Early Twentieth Centuries
- Three Issues from a CPR Management: Village Forestry in Post-colonial South Asia.
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