
Indigenist Mobilization
Confronting Electoral Communism and Precarious Livelihoods in Post-Reform Kerala
By: Luisa Steur
eBook | 15 May 2017 | Edition Number 1
At a Glance
302 Pages
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In Kerala, political activists with a background in Communism are now instead asserting political demands on the basis of indigenous identity. Why did a notion of indigenous belonging come to replace the discourse of class in subaltern struggles? Indigenist Mobilization answers this question through a detailed ethnographic study of the dynamics between the Communist party and indigenist activists, and the subtle ways in which global capitalist restructuring leads to a resonance of indigenist visions in the changing everyday working lives of subaltern groups in Kerala.
Industry Reviews
"The ethnographic material incorporated in the book is vast... But the richness of the material presented precisely offers the book its authority- the multiple conjunctures that led to the rise of indigeneity are detailed with great effort. For young researchers using ethnography as a method, the work could present an example of navigating positionality issues determined by one's social location through the sheer detail of the evidences collected and the sensitivity with which they are presented... The book is perhaps most important for the theoretical insights it provides." ? Dialectical Anthropology
"This book is recommended reading for those who work with issues of land governance, resource politics, social mobilisation and identity and citizenship, and to students and general readers eager to get an impression of what anthropology at its rigorous best looks like." ? The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology
"Indigenist Mobilization ably shows that indigeneity is not an inevitable let alone natural or essential approach to identity and action but one that, as anthropology has become adept at describing, is built by specific actors in specific circumstances for specific purposes. This lesson is crucial for the discipline as well as for policymakers who must deal with the demands of newly-energized 'indigenous' groups." ? Anthropology Review Database
"This is a wonderfully written piece that will raise some eyebrows and generate some wonderful debates. The critique of indigenist "identity" politics has been sorely needed for a long time, and this work helps us assess that context in a more robust and critical fashion without falling into a lackluster, celebratory mode of championing indigenous politics on a pure level of 'identity' and 'rights'." ? Ananthakrishnan Aiyer, University of Michigan
"A summation of outstanding research, and based on ethical, committed, and egalitarian fieldwork, this book has an enormously important contribution to make to a number of fields, including South Asian Politics, Ethnography and History, Social Movement Analysis, International Studies and Environmental Studies." ? Kavita Philip, UC Irvine
on
List of Figures
Maps
Acknowledgements?
PART I: INTRODUCTION
Introduction: Research and Activism in, on, and Beyond a Capitalist World System
PART II: ADIVASINESS AND ITS DISCONTENTS
Chapter 1. The "Tribe" in World Time
Chapter 2. The importance of Being Adivasi
PART III: CONTENTION AND CONFLICT AT THE END OF A REFORMIST CYCLE
Chapter 3. Electoral Communism and Its Critics
Chapter 4. Widening Circles of Political Disidentification
PART IV: CONDITIONING INDIGENISM: THE "KERALA MODEL" IN CRISIS
Chapter 5. Salaried but Subaltern: On the Vulnerability of Social Mobility
Chapter 6. Adivasi Labor: Of Workers without Work
PART V: CONCLUSION
Chapter 7. The (Dis)Placements of Class
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
ISBN: 9781785333835
ISBN-10: 1785333836
Series: Dislocations : Book 20
Published: 15th May 2017
Format: ePUB
Language: English
Number of Pages: 302
Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Volume Number: 20
Edition Number: 1
























