IBP Logo
Loading...
New Arrivals
Bestsellers
Recommended
Negotiating Marginality: Conflicts Over Tribal Development In India

Negotiating Marginality: Conflicts Over Tribal Development In India

$50.00
Author:Rajakishor Mahana
ISBN 13:9789383166312
Binding:Hardbound
Language:English
Year:2019
Subject:Anthropology and Sociology/Tribal Studies

About the Book

Contents: Foreword by Nandini Sundar. Preface. 1. A postmodern encounter with Adivasi: rethinking marginality, development and resistance. 2. Producing underdevelopment: the politics of hunger deaths in Odisha. 3. Contested development: the political economy of survival. 4. Smell of land: internal dynamics of conflict over land. 5. Politics of violence and poetics of resistance: the police state and tribal anarchists. 6. Politics of territoriality: keeping state at a distance. 7. Negotiating marginality: subaltern citizens and the challenges of transformation. Acronyms and Abbreviations. Glossary. Bibliography. Index. Providing a critical ethnography of five different tribal movements fighting against the mega-industrialization projects in Odisha, India, Negotiating Marginality: Conflicts over Tribal Development in India presents a thick description of the confrontation of the tribals to the authoritative forces of state domination. This confrontation, a counter-hegemonic discourse, is neither antagonistic to change nor anti to development, but rather in fact, the author argues, that the tribals are the subaltern citizens who aspire for not only more material and economic prosperity but also freedom – freedom from domination and deprivation. The book therefore seeks to answer one important question: how do the tribals appropriate marginality in their everyday lives in challenging domination and celebrating their desires, wishes, anticipations and material prosperity as well as in coping with the ruins of frustration and suffering. Drawing on long-term ethnographic fieldwork carried over a decade (2006-16), this book provides empirical evidences and conceptual explorations on the resistance of subaltern citizens against domination. The author challenges current theories of social movements which claim that a cultural critique of the ‘development’ paradigm is writ large in the political actions of those marginalized by ‘development’ – tribals who lived in harmony with nature, combining reverence for nature with the sustainable management of resources. On the other hand, questioning the established notion of ‘marginality as a problem’, the author re-visits ‘marginality’ as a possible site that nourishes the capacity of the tribals to resist and to imagine and create a new world. The complexity of tribal politics, then, cannot be reduced to an opposition between ‘development’ and ‘resistance’. The book therefore persuades us to re-examine the politics of representation within the ideology of progressive movements.