Alabama Law Scholarly Commons Working Papers Faculty Scholarship 10-9-2019 Changing the Subject of Sati Deepa Das Acevedo University of Alabama - School of Law,
[email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.ua.edu/fac_working_papers Recommended Citation Deepa Das Acevedo, Changing the Subject of Sati, (2019). Available at: https://scholarship.law.ua.edu/fac_working_papers/408 This Working Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at Alabama Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Working Papers by an authorized administrator of Alabama Law Scholarly Commons. Changing the Subject of Sati Deepa Das Acevedo POLITICAL AND LEGAL ANTHROPOLOGY REVIEW (Forthcoming May 2020) This paper can be downloaded without charge from the Social Science Research Network Electronic Paper Collection: http://ssrn.com/abstract=3465698 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3465698 Political and Legal Anthropology Review–FORTHCOMING 2020 Deepa Das Acevedo University of Alabama School of Law Changing the Subject of Sati On November 11, 1999, in a small village in India’s most populous state, a middle-aged woman named Charan Shah died on her husband’s funeral pyre. Charan’s death quickly gained national notoriety as the first sati, or widow immolation, to occur in over 20 years. Equally quickly, commentators developed a preoccupation with procedural minutiae that would influence coverage of subsequent satis. Ultimately, several progressive commentators came to the counterintuitive conclusion that the ritually anomalous nature of Charan’s death confirmed its voluntary, secular, and non- criminal nature. This paper argues that the “un-labeling” of Charan Shah’s death, like those of other women between 1999–2006, reflects a tension between the non-individuated, impervious model of personhood exemplified by sati and the particularized citizen-subject of liberal-democratic politics in India.