ABSTRACT

Since the 1990s, the Indigenous movement worldwide has become increasingly relevant to research in India, re-shaping the terms of engagement with Adivasi (Indigenous/tribal) peoples and their pasts. This book responds to the growing need for an inter-disciplinary re-assessment of Tribal studies in postcolonial India and defines a new agenda for Adivasi studies. It considers the existing conceptual and historical parameters of Tribal studies, as a means of addressing new approaches to histories of de-colonization and patterns of identity-formation that have become visible since national independence. Contributors address a number of important concerns, including the meaning of Indigenous studies in the context of globalised academic and political imaginaries, and the possibilities and pitfalls of constructions of indigeneity as both a foundational and a relational concept. A series of short editorial essays provide theoretical clarity to issues of representation, resistance, agency, recognition and marginality. The book is an essential read for students and scholars of Indian Sociology, Anthropology, History, Cultural Studies and Indigenous studies.

part |44 pages

Contesting categories, blurring boundaries

chapter |25 pages

The dangers of belonging

Tribes, indigenous peoples and homelands in South Asia

chapter |15 pages

Performative genres as boundary markers

Folklore and the creation of Purulia as a border zone

part |38 pages

Revisiting resistance

chapter |17 pages

Rebellion as modern self fashioning

A Santal movement in colonial Bengal

chapter |15 pages

Reconstructing an event

The Great Rebellion of 1857–8 and Singhbhum Indigenes

part |39 pages

Landscape and Adivasi agency

part |53 pages

Politics, participation and recognition

chapter |13 pages

Sovereignty through indigenous governance

Reviving ‘traditional political institutions' in Northeast India

chapter |15 pages

Politics, development and identity

Jharkhand, 1991–2009

part |40 pages

Mainstreams and margins

chapter |18 pages

Using the past to win the present

Peasant revolt, political parties and the print media in leftist West Bengal

chapter |14 pages

Who cares for a new state?

The imaginary institution of Jharkhand 1