Introduction: Caste in/as Humanities: Unsettling the Politics of Suffering

From the time of early travel narratives on South Asia by western tradesmen, orientalist scholars like William Jones and Max Muller, narratives written by Christian missionaries like Mead or Caldwell or the denigrators of ‘oriental societies’ like G.W. F. Hegel and concerned critics like Karl Marx t...

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Main Authors: Kalyan Kumar Das, Samrat Sengupta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ratnabali Publisher 2019-10-01
Series:Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://sanglap-journal.in.cp-in-6.webhostbox.net/index.php/sanglap/article/view/144
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spelling doaj-3ea8e08aa0344f6cb3ee3c69d22db6bd2020-11-25T01:31:19ZengRatnabali PublisherSanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry2349-80642019-10-01610106144Introduction: Caste in/as Humanities: Unsettling the Politics of SufferingKalyan Kumar Das0Samrat Sengupta1Presidency University, KolkataSammilani Mahavidyalaya, KolkataFrom the time of early travel narratives on South Asia by western tradesmen, orientalist scholars like William Jones and Max Muller, narratives written by Christian missionaries like Mead or Caldwell or the denigrators of ‘oriental societies’ like G.W. F. Hegel and concerned critics like Karl Marx to much of our postcolonial socio-political struggles, ‘caste’ has been perceived as either an elusive, resilient hydra headed monster, or a unique feature of the Hindu society that pre-empts competition that western modernity brings about. However, caste could be read both diachronically as well as synchronically, as a historical formation as well as a structural imperative. This makes any easy understanding of the question of caste impossible. Textual evidences are not enough, neither are the various archaeological resources, as we know that each historical moment is also constituted by the logic of synchronicity and structure which produces its own form of aphasia and silence. This introduction to the Special Issue of Sanglapon ‘Caste as/in Humanities’ would show how question of caste is also about silence and therefore requires incessant and seamless re-textualization.http://sanglap-journal.in.cp-in-6.webhostbox.net/index.php/sanglap/article/view/144varnacastehumanitiesuntouchabilitycolonial modernityexperienceself-narrativesre-textualization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kalyan Kumar Das
Samrat Sengupta
spellingShingle Kalyan Kumar Das
Samrat Sengupta
Introduction: Caste in/as Humanities: Unsettling the Politics of Suffering
Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
varna
caste
humanities
untouchability
colonial modernity
experience
self-narratives
re-textualization
author_facet Kalyan Kumar Das
Samrat Sengupta
author_sort Kalyan Kumar Das
title Introduction: Caste in/as Humanities: Unsettling the Politics of Suffering
title_short Introduction: Caste in/as Humanities: Unsettling the Politics of Suffering
title_full Introduction: Caste in/as Humanities: Unsettling the Politics of Suffering
title_fullStr Introduction: Caste in/as Humanities: Unsettling the Politics of Suffering
title_full_unstemmed Introduction: Caste in/as Humanities: Unsettling the Politics of Suffering
title_sort introduction: caste in/as humanities: unsettling the politics of suffering
publisher Ratnabali Publisher
series Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
issn 2349-8064
publishDate 2019-10-01
description From the time of early travel narratives on South Asia by western tradesmen, orientalist scholars like William Jones and Max Muller, narratives written by Christian missionaries like Mead or Caldwell or the denigrators of ‘oriental societies’ like G.W. F. Hegel and concerned critics like Karl Marx to much of our postcolonial socio-political struggles, ‘caste’ has been perceived as either an elusive, resilient hydra headed monster, or a unique feature of the Hindu society that pre-empts competition that western modernity brings about. However, caste could be read both diachronically as well as synchronically, as a historical formation as well as a structural imperative. This makes any easy understanding of the question of caste impossible. Textual evidences are not enough, neither are the various archaeological resources, as we know that each historical moment is also constituted by the logic of synchronicity and structure which produces its own form of aphasia and silence. This introduction to the Special Issue of Sanglapon ‘Caste as/in Humanities’ would show how question of caste is also about silence and therefore requires incessant and seamless re-textualization.
topic varna
caste
humanities
untouchability
colonial modernity
experience
self-narratives
re-textualization
url http://sanglap-journal.in.cp-in-6.webhostbox.net/index.php/sanglap/article/view/144
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