Caste, Reading-habits and the Incomplete Project of Indian Democracy

Emphasizing on the functioning of caste as embodiment, this paper attempts to show how the internalization of dominant caste-based framework(s) shapes our habits of thinking which include epistemological and pedagogical orientations as well. The paper briefly traces how such frameworks have settled...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Subro Saha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brandeis University Library 2021-05-01
Series:Caste
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/264
id doaj-fea3c9746362481fa3a9b7e575db15f5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fea3c9746362481fa3a9b7e575db15f52021-05-27T16:47:09ZengBrandeis University LibraryCaste2639-49282021-05-012115317310.26812/caste.v2i1.264264Caste, Reading-habits and the Incomplete Project of Indian DemocracySubro Saha0Amity University, Utrecht UniversityEmphasizing on the functioning of caste as embodiment, this paper attempts to show how the internalization of dominant caste-based framework(s) shapes our habits of thinking which include epistemological and pedagogical orientations as well. The paper briefly traces how such frameworks have settled through historical shifts and shaped dominant imagination of the nation’ that has appropriated caste-system as its essence. To show such making of a dominant framework of caste and Hindu-nation, the paper briefly turns towards nineteenth century Bengal, both as a reminder of the many forms of dwelling within vernacular communities and how such multiplicities came to be reduced within a hegemonic framework of majoritarian Hindu- nation. Such making, the paper submits, shapes a doubleness of the decolonial project of nation-making which finds its paradoxical settlement within the postcolonial democratic framework through the embodiment of the majoritarian (casteist) framework of Hindu-nation. The paper, therefore, examines how such problems of embodiment become an infrastructural problem that haunt one’s everyday imagination, and therefore calls for creation of infrastructures that can enable a training of imagination to unlearn such embodied frameworks of segregation. As one such small onto- epistemological possibility, the paper examines the role of aesthetic education and its suspending potentials.https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/264casteembodimentnationequalityreading
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Subro Saha
spellingShingle Subro Saha
Caste, Reading-habits and the Incomplete Project of Indian Democracy
Caste
caste
embodiment
nation
equality
reading
author_facet Subro Saha
author_sort Subro Saha
title Caste, Reading-habits and the Incomplete Project of Indian Democracy
title_short Caste, Reading-habits and the Incomplete Project of Indian Democracy
title_full Caste, Reading-habits and the Incomplete Project of Indian Democracy
title_fullStr Caste, Reading-habits and the Incomplete Project of Indian Democracy
title_full_unstemmed Caste, Reading-habits and the Incomplete Project of Indian Democracy
title_sort caste, reading-habits and the incomplete project of indian democracy
publisher Brandeis University Library
series Caste
issn 2639-4928
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Emphasizing on the functioning of caste as embodiment, this paper attempts to show how the internalization of dominant caste-based framework(s) shapes our habits of thinking which include epistemological and pedagogical orientations as well. The paper briefly traces how such frameworks have settled through historical shifts and shaped dominant imagination of the nation’ that has appropriated caste-system as its essence. To show such making of a dominant framework of caste and Hindu-nation, the paper briefly turns towards nineteenth century Bengal, both as a reminder of the many forms of dwelling within vernacular communities and how such multiplicities came to be reduced within a hegemonic framework of majoritarian Hindu- nation. Such making, the paper submits, shapes a doubleness of the decolonial project of nation-making which finds its paradoxical settlement within the postcolonial democratic framework through the embodiment of the majoritarian (casteist) framework of Hindu-nation. The paper, therefore, examines how such problems of embodiment become an infrastructural problem that haunt one’s everyday imagination, and therefore calls for creation of infrastructures that can enable a training of imagination to unlearn such embodied frameworks of segregation. As one such small onto- epistemological possibility, the paper examines the role of aesthetic education and its suspending potentials.
topic caste
embodiment
nation
equality
reading
url https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/264
work_keys_str_mv AT subrosaha castereadinghabitsandtheincompleteprojectofindiandemocracy
_version_ 1721425506494054400