The culturalization of caste in India : identity and inequality in a multicultural age

Bibliographic Information

The culturalization of caste in India : identity and inequality in a multicultural age

Balmurli Natrajan

(Routledge contemporary South Asia series, 47)

Routledge, 2013

  • : pbk

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Note

"First issued in paperback 2013"--T.p. verso

Bibliography: p. [187]-200

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

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.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Artisans Part 1: Producing Identities 3. Culture 4. Community Part 2: Inequalities 5. Reproduction 6. Multiculturalism

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