Untouchable Pasts: Religion, Identity, and Power among a Central Indian Community, 1780-1950

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Untouchable Pasts constructs a history of an untouchable and heretical community over the last two hundred years. The Satnamis of Central India have combined the features of a caste and a sect to question and challenge the tenor of ritual power that variously defines Hinduism. At the same time, within the community, schemes of meaning and power, particularly those centering on gender, have been imbued with ambiguity and a reproduction of forms of inequality.

The book presents an interpretive account of Satnami endeavors, encounters, and experiences by combining history and anthropology, archival and field work. It addresses a clutch of theoretical questions and a range of key and inextricably bound analytical relationships in an accessible manner. Issues of caste and untouchability, sect and kinship, myths and pasts are rendered here as part of a wider dynamic between religion and power, gender and community, writing and the constitution of traditions, ritual and the making of modernities, and orality and the construction of histories.

Indeed, Untouchable Pasts brings together the perspectives and possibilities defined by three overlapping but distinct theoretical developments that have been elaborated in recent years: first, novel renderings of anthropologies and enthnographies of the historical imagination; second, critically engaged constructions of histories from below, particularly by the collective Subaltern Studies endeavor; and, finally, a conceptual emphasis on the 'everyday' as an arena for the production, negotiation, transaction, and contestations of meanings within wider networks and relationships of power.

By casting these analytical tendencies in a critical dialogue with one another, Untouchable Pasts works toward questioning some of those overarching oppositions--for example, between ritual and rationality, myth and history, tradition and modernity, and community and state--that have formed the conceptual core of several inherited traditions of social and political theory within the academy in both Western and non-Western contexts.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
The Making of Satnampanth 17801850
25
Malguzars Gurus and Missionaries 18501900
47
Satnamis in Village Life 19001950
79
A Contested Past The Myths of Satnampanth
115
Reform and Authority The Satnami Mahasabha 19251950
145
Contending Histories Old Stories and New Pasts
183
Conclusion
207
Genealogy of Satnami Gurus Four Generations
223
Population of Satnamis 19011931
224
Glossary
227
Notes
231
Bibliography
281
Index
297
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About the author (1998)

Saurabh Dube is Visiting Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at El Colegio de Mexico.

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