A New Paradigm in South Asia
Manu Bhagavan, Anne Feldhaus, eds.. Claiming Power from Below: Dalits and the Subaltern Question in India. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2008. x + 222 pp. $25.00, cloth, ISBN 978-0-19-569304-1. Reviewed by Chinnaiah Jangam Published on H-Asia (December, 2009) Commissioned by Sumit Guha (The University of Texas at Austin) Over the last two decades, the South Asian alternative world free of exploitation and inhu‐ landscape has experienced a resurgence of un‐ manity. However, the mainstream writings focus‐ touchable voices challenging the dominant social, ing on colonial and postcolonial South Asia did economic, political, cultural, and epistemological not integrate Dalit visions and their articulations structures, and questioning the traditional mecha‐ as part of the South Asian experience of colonial‐ nisms of oppression. Even though Indian society ism and modernity. Because of their own social lo‐ and its traditional institutional structures have cation and ideological limitations, even many been critically interrogated throughout its history, caste Hindu scholars refused to accept and dwell the perspectives from the most oppressed sections on caste-based oppression and exploitation. of the society, like the untouchables (Dalits), did The contemporary upsurge of Dalits in Indian not form a part of mainstream intellectual dis‐ cultural and political mainstream, therefore, not courses and analyses. Historically, criticisms of only challenges the existing historical and so‐ caste, gender, and other oppression and exploita‐ ciopolitical scholarship on South Asia, but also tion are as old as the institutions themselves--a tries to provide new epistemological alternatives fact that has often been discounted or glossed by bringing the ideas and articulations from the over by the dominant, largely Brahmanical, margins to the core in the rewriting of history, canon.
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