Caste

The Double Stage: Caste’s Schizophrenic Modernity between Spectacle and Shadow

Caste from the pre-modern, colonial to the post-Republican; this analysis draws from, among others, works by Nicholas Dirks (2001), Anand Teltumbde (2014) and Gopal Guru (2016) to map this transition showing that contemporary caste should be best understood as a sort of social schizophrenia driven by imaginative acts whereby power perpetuates itself through a convoluted hermetic legitimising act in India.

Dalit rights are human rights — the campaign

The National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights (NCDHR) was...

‘Caste discrimination will not go unless the international community speaks up’

  -- Praveen Rashtrapal, Congress MP   At the preparatory meeting for...

Split Wide Open

  Nature was undiscriminating in the staggering death and devastation...

‘Power within the Church still lies with the upper castes’

Ruth Manorama, herself a part of the Dalit Christian...

‘It is sad that this happened while I am working for the uplift of the Harijans’

Courtesy: wikimedia.orgContrary to popular belief, there were many failed attempts on...

Dalits demand justice, now

Dalit Rights activists release ‘Black Paper’, march to Parliament...

Advani & Company

In a recent interview to Outlook magazine, the Union...

‘Caste is a precious gift’

  The caste system receives generous treatment in Indian textbooks....

Left is right

Given Hindutva’s fascist threat, a distinction must be made...

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The Double Stage: Caste’s Schizophrenic Modernity between Spectacle and Shadow

Caste from the pre-modern, colonial to the post-Republican; this analysis draws from, among others, works by Nicholas Dirks (2001), Anand Teltumbde (2014) and Gopal Guru (2016) to map this transition showing that contemporary caste should be best understood as a sort of social schizophrenia driven by imaginative acts whereby power perpetuates itself through a convoluted hermetic legitimising act in India.

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