000 02040nam a22001577a 4500
999 _c27539
_d27539
020 _a9781108489904
082 _a305.51220954
_bLEE-H
100 1 _aLee, Alexander,
_eauthor.
245 1 0 _aFrom hierarchy to ethnicity :
_bthe politics of Caste in twentieth-century India /
_cAlexander Lee.
260 _aNew Delhi,
_bCambridge University Press :
_c2020.
300 _axiv;275p.
520 _a"Caste identities have been fundamental in shaping Indian politics, the loyalties, the structure of the party system, and the distribution of public resources. This book explains when and how caste identities became politicized, and how the nature of caste itself changed over time. The way in which caste is understood is dependent on time and place; some understand it as an integrated system based on subtle gradations of hierarchical difference, while others perceive it as a set of bounded groups similar to ethnicities in other countries across the globe. Using a wide range of historical data sources, the book shows how these identities evolved from the colonial period to the present. It describes how uneven economic development shifted the set of groups and regions where caste is important, while the spread of mass politics and the corresponding decline of patrimonial politics led to a decline in the hierarchical nature of the system. While colonial rule established some of the structural conditions of these changes, the enthusiasm with which caste activists responded to these conditions fluctuated from group to group. Even after these changes, the caste system in India differs from ethnic politics in other parts of the world, in ways that reflect its hierarchical history. The theory discussed in this book foregrounds how identity politics can vary not just between countries, but between groups, and how the modern conception of the ethnic group is the product of a long, and highly contingent, historical process"--
650 _aPolitics and government
_zIndia
650 _aCaste
_xSocial classes
_zIndia
942 _2ddc
_cBK