ABSTRACT

This book examines Dalit mobilization and the transformation of rural power relations in the context of intense agrarian violence involving Maoist guerrillas and upper caste militias backed by state forces in Bihar in the 1980s. The book investigates why thousands of Dalits took up arms and highlights the specificities of Dalit participation in the Maoist Movement  and develops an anthropology of the Maoist Revolution in India.

chapter 1|17 pages

Introduction

Maoist Revolution in Perspective

chapter 2|52 pages

Submerged Violences

Dalits, Landlessness, and Subordination in Bihar

chapter 3|38 pages

From the Mud Houses of Dumari

Revolutionary Murmurings and Dalit Militancy

chapter 4|27 pages

Bonded Labourer to Maoist Guerrilla

Life Story of a Dalit Revolutionary

chapter 5|36 pages

Negotiating Powers

Dalits and Shifting Mobilizations

chapter 6|42 pages

Production and Reproduction of Violence

State, Senas and Maoists

chapter 7|6 pages

Conclusions

An Anthropology of Revolution