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Marginalized self: tales of resistance of a community / edited by Rahul Ghai, Arvind Kumar Mishra and Sanjay Kumar

Contributor(s): Language: English Publication details: Primus Books, 2020. Delhi :Description: ix, 159 p. ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 9789389933802
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 307.14095412 R0
Summary: The marginalised self questions the century-old perception of the Musahar community as rat-eating, pig-rearing, habitually drunk, lazy and unmotivated; a perception fostered by the dominant discourse of development, and the historically prevalent hierarchical social system. This collection of essays argues that these victims of the dominant model of development acquire a different kind of power and critical consciousness due to their marginality, which helps them to examine the processes, practices, and institutions that give rise to and justify poverty, displacement, corruption, greed, competition, and violence in the name of development. Ethnographic studies focussing on the Musahars have demonstrated that the people of this community are capable of offering resistance to the might of the development regime in terms of a comparative critique of modern civilization. They can assert the value of their own worldview and epistemology, and in doing so, they subvert the superiority that is generally assigned to the logical and formal schema in understanding the world, and which often speaks in contradictory, evasive, ambiguous, and metaphorical terms. The book offers insights into marginality, culture, and development in India and will be of interest to students, scholars, practitioners and policymakers associated with the disciplines of development studies, social work, social anthropology, critical social psychology, history, and public policy.
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Book Book Prime Ministers Museum and Library 307.14095412 R0 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 188836

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The marginalised self questions the century-old perception of the Musahar community as rat-eating, pig-rearing, habitually drunk, lazy and unmotivated; a perception fostered by the dominant discourse of development, and the historically prevalent hierarchical social system. This collection of essays argues that these victims of the dominant model of development acquire a different kind of power and critical consciousness due to their marginality, which helps them to examine the processes, practices, and institutions that give rise to and justify poverty, displacement, corruption, greed, competition, and violence in the name of development.
Ethnographic studies focussing on the Musahars have demonstrated that the people of this community are capable of offering resistance to the might of the development regime in terms of a comparative critique of modern civilization. They can assert the value of their own worldview and epistemology, and in doing so, they subvert the superiority that is generally assigned to the logical and formal schema in understanding the world, and which often speaks in contradictory, evasive, ambiguous, and metaphorical terms.
The book offers insights into marginality, culture, and development in India and will be of interest to students, scholars, practitioners and policymakers associated with the disciplines of development studies, social work, social anthropology, critical social psychology, history, and public policy.

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