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Abstract
The Izhavas are an ex-untouchable community in the southern Indian state of Kerala. Politically and economically weak, stigmatised as 'toddy tappers' and 'devil dancers', and considered unapproachable by clean caste Hindus, a century ago Izhavas were associated with other manual-labouring untouchable castes. In recent decades they have sought to improve their position by accumulating economic, symbolic and cultural capital through employment, religion, politics, migration, marriage, education and have tried to assert their right to mobility, often in the face of opposition from their high status Christian and Nayar neighbours.
This study examines how Izhavas, through repudiation of their nineteenth-century identity and search for mobility, have come into complex relationships with modernity, colonialism and globalisation. Filippo Osella and Caroline Osella highlight the complexities and contradictions of modern identity, both locally and globally. The authors' approach builds upon and goes beyond a south Asian focus, showing how the Izhavas represent the rise of formerly stigmatised groups who remain at the same time trapped by stereotype and material disadvantage. Absolute mobility, they argue, has not led to relative mobility within a society which remains stratified and prone to new forms of social exclusion.
'This comprehensive ethnographic study by two social anthropologists of a community in the southern Indian state of Kerala provides a deep understanding of Keralite society, setting it within a complex analytical framework that goes far beyond most previous literature on the area.'
International Review of Social History
'Essential reading for Indianists and those engaged in the comparative study of modernity, be they anthropologists, historians, or sociologists'
Ethnos
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Contents | v | ||
List of Tables and Maps | vi | ||
Dedication | vii | ||
Acknowledgements | ix | ||
Preface | xi | ||
1. Introduction | 1 | ||
Notes | 263 | ||
2. Working for Progress | 38 | ||
Notes | 264 | ||
3. Marriage and Mobility | 81 | ||
Notes | 266 | ||
4. Consumption: Promises of Escape | 117 | ||
Notes | 267 | ||
5. Religion as a Tool for Mobility | 154 | ||
Notes | 268 | ||
6. Mobility and Power | 189 | ||
7. Micropolitics, or the Political in the Personal | 220 | ||
Notes | 270 | ||
8. Conclusions | 247 | ||
Notes | 272 | ||
Glossary | 274 | ||
Bibliography | 287 | ||
Index | 307 | ||
adukkulla kanan 100 | 100 | ||
Advaita Asram, Alwaye 156 | 156 | ||
agni homams 168 | 168 | ||
agricultural labour/labourers | 35 |