ABSTRACT

In Savage Attack: Tribal Insurgency in India the authors ask whether there is anything particularly adivasi about the forms of resistance that have been labelled as adivasi movements. What does it mean to speak about adivasi as opposed to peasant resistance? Can one differentiate adivasi resistance from that of other lower castes such as the dalits? In this volume the authors move beyond stereotypes of tribal rebellion to argue that it is important to explore how and why particular forms of resistance are depicted as adivasi issues at particular points in time. Interpretations that have depicted adivasis as a united and highly politicised group of people have romanticised and demonized tribal society and history, thus denying the individuals and communities involved any real agency. Both the interpretations of the state and of left-wing supporters of tribal insurgencies have continued to ignore the complex realities of tribal life and the variety in the expressions of political activism that have resulted across the length and breadth of the Indian subcontinent.

chapter |34 pages

Introduction

Savage Attack: Adivasis and Insurgency in India 1

chapter Chapter One|29 pages

We Shall Fight Them on the Beach

Counterinsurgency, Colonisation and the Andaman Islanders, 1771–1863

chapter Chapter Two|26 pages

‘Natural Boundaries’

Negotiating Land Rights and Establishing Rule on the East India Company’s North-Eastern Frontier 1790s–1820s

chapter Chapter Three|22 pages

From ‘Natural Philosophy’ to ‘Political Ritual’

An Ethno-Historical Reading of the Colonial Sources on the Konds’ Religion (Orissa)

chapter Chapter Four|28 pages

Locating Adivasi Identity in Colonial India

The Oraons and the Tana Bhagats in Chhotanagpur, 1914–1919

chapter Chapter Five|27 pages

Tribal Armed Rebellion of 1922–1924 in the Madras Presidency

A Study of Causation as Colonial Legitimation

chapter Chapter Six|33 pages

Events, Incidents and Accidents

Re-Thinking Indigenous Resistance in the Andaman Islands 1

chapter Chapter Eight|22 pages

Adivasis and Communists in Post-Reform Kerala

Neoliberalism, Political Disillusionment, and the Indigenist Challenge

chapter Chapter Nine|19 pages

Thoughts on Religious Experience and ‘Politics’ in Adivasi India

An Anthropologist Attempts a Re-Reading of History

chapter Chapter Ten|26 pages

Alcoholics Anonymous

The Maoist Movement in Jharkhand, India*