Going Primitive: The Ethics of Indigenous Rights Activism in Contemporary Jharkhand

How and why did a labor union organizer from Goa, a former Naxalite student cadre from West Bengal and a Jesuit priest from Tamil Nadu end up as spokespersons for adivasi rights in contemporary Jharkhand? What caused their discourse to shift from tribal/adivasi to indigeneity? Might indigeneity be a...

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Main Author: Uday Chandra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud 2013-10-01
Series:South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/samaj/3600
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spelling doaj-b1f25a753b404fd2b64924d1980e93342021-02-09T13:08:32ZengCentre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du SudSouth Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal1960-60602013-10-01710.4000/samaj.3600Going Primitive: The Ethics of Indigenous Rights Activism in Contemporary JharkhandUday ChandraHow and why did a labor union organizer from Goa, a former Naxalite student cadre from West Bengal and a Jesuit priest from Tamil Nadu end up as spokespersons for adivasi rights in contemporary Jharkhand? What caused their discourse to shift from tribal/adivasi to indigeneity? Might indigeneity be an ideology for them? To answer these questions, this paper analyzes the oral histories of three leading indigenous rights activists in Jharkhand. In these self-narratives, I focus on how these middle-class activists have crafted their political ethics with reference to ‘indigenous peoples’ in India and beyond. I argue that ‘indigeneity’ functions in Jharkhandi activist discourses as a marker of a distinctive post-materialist turn in bourgeois politics. The defense of the indigenous speaks to deep-seated existential crises for these activists, who seek to transcend the modern domains of state and capital and to locate an authentic space of critique in imagined adivasi collectivities.http://journals.openedition.org/samaj/3600indigeneitytribes in Indiasocial activismcultural capitalbourgeois politicsradical politics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Uday Chandra
spellingShingle Uday Chandra
Going Primitive: The Ethics of Indigenous Rights Activism in Contemporary Jharkhand
South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal
indigeneity
tribes in India
social activism
cultural capital
bourgeois politics
radical politics
author_facet Uday Chandra
author_sort Uday Chandra
title Going Primitive: The Ethics of Indigenous Rights Activism in Contemporary Jharkhand
title_short Going Primitive: The Ethics of Indigenous Rights Activism in Contemporary Jharkhand
title_full Going Primitive: The Ethics of Indigenous Rights Activism in Contemporary Jharkhand
title_fullStr Going Primitive: The Ethics of Indigenous Rights Activism in Contemporary Jharkhand
title_full_unstemmed Going Primitive: The Ethics of Indigenous Rights Activism in Contemporary Jharkhand
title_sort going primitive: the ethics of indigenous rights activism in contemporary jharkhand
publisher Centre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud
series South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal
issn 1960-6060
publishDate 2013-10-01
description How and why did a labor union organizer from Goa, a former Naxalite student cadre from West Bengal and a Jesuit priest from Tamil Nadu end up as spokespersons for adivasi rights in contemporary Jharkhand? What caused their discourse to shift from tribal/adivasi to indigeneity? Might indigeneity be an ideology for them? To answer these questions, this paper analyzes the oral histories of three leading indigenous rights activists in Jharkhand. In these self-narratives, I focus on how these middle-class activists have crafted their political ethics with reference to ‘indigenous peoples’ in India and beyond. I argue that ‘indigeneity’ functions in Jharkhandi activist discourses as a marker of a distinctive post-materialist turn in bourgeois politics. The defense of the indigenous speaks to deep-seated existential crises for these activists, who seek to transcend the modern domains of state and capital and to locate an authentic space of critique in imagined adivasi collectivities.
topic indigeneity
tribes in India
social activism
cultural capital
bourgeois politics
radical politics
url http://journals.openedition.org/samaj/3600
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