Who Speaks for the Village? Representing and Practicing the “Rural” in India from the Colonial to the Post-Colonial

The idea of the village has been central throughout Indian history. Since colonial times, Indian villages have been pictured as “small republics” and as a relevant microcosm for understanding Indian society at large. Combining the issue of representation with that of rurality, this special issue inv...

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Main Authors: Joël Cabalion, Delphine Thivet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du Sud
Series:South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/samaj/5384
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author Joël Cabalion
Delphine Thivet
author_facet Joël Cabalion
Delphine Thivet
author_sort Joël Cabalion
collection DOAJ
description The idea of the village has been central throughout Indian history. Since colonial times, Indian villages have been pictured as “small republics” and as a relevant microcosm for understanding Indian society at large. Combining the issue of representation with that of rurality, this special issue investigates the actors, be they external or internal to rural society, who claim to represent the “village,” and how its internal social differentiation is being addressed: who does speak for/about/of/against/with the village? The different aspects of the representations and practices of the “rural” and its social components, contributing to the social production of rural space, are herein studied from a range of different disciplinary perspectives, such as history, political science, sociology, anthropology, and literary studies/theory. At last, the purpose of this issue is to reassert village and rural studies as a legitimate and crucial area of research through which to understand the important social, economic, political and cultural dynamics and tensions which mark the trajectory of Indian society over time.
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spelling doaj.art-30c71aa8a1c94b1eb1fb42c8b6b88e512024-02-12T15:39:12ZengCentre d’Etudes de l’Inde et de l’Asie du SudSouth Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal1960-60602110.4000/samaj.5384Who Speaks for the Village? Representing and Practicing the “Rural” in India from the Colonial to the Post-ColonialJoël CabalionDelphine ThivetThe idea of the village has been central throughout Indian history. Since colonial times, Indian villages have been pictured as “small republics” and as a relevant microcosm for understanding Indian society at large. Combining the issue of representation with that of rurality, this special issue investigates the actors, be they external or internal to rural society, who claim to represent the “village,” and how its internal social differentiation is being addressed: who does speak for/about/of/against/with the village? The different aspects of the representations and practices of the “rural” and its social components, contributing to the social production of rural space, are herein studied from a range of different disciplinary perspectives, such as history, political science, sociology, anthropology, and literary studies/theory. At last, the purpose of this issue is to reassert village and rural studies as a legitimate and crucial area of research through which to understand the important social, economic, political and cultural dynamics and tensions which mark the trajectory of Indian society over time.https://journals.openedition.org/samaj/5384Indiadispossessionrepresentationvillageruralagrarian crisis
spellingShingle Joël Cabalion
Delphine Thivet
Who Speaks for the Village? Representing and Practicing the “Rural” in India from the Colonial to the Post-Colonial
South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal
India
dispossession
representation
village
rural
agrarian crisis
title Who Speaks for the Village? Representing and Practicing the “Rural” in India from the Colonial to the Post-Colonial
title_full Who Speaks for the Village? Representing and Practicing the “Rural” in India from the Colonial to the Post-Colonial
title_fullStr Who Speaks for the Village? Representing and Practicing the “Rural” in India from the Colonial to the Post-Colonial
title_full_unstemmed Who Speaks for the Village? Representing and Practicing the “Rural” in India from the Colonial to the Post-Colonial
title_short Who Speaks for the Village? Representing and Practicing the “Rural” in India from the Colonial to the Post-Colonial
title_sort who speaks for the village representing and practicing the rural in india from the colonial to the post colonial
topic India
dispossession
representation
village
rural
agrarian crisis
url https://journals.openedition.org/samaj/5384
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AT delphinethivet whospeaksforthevillagerepresentingandpracticingtheruralinindiafromthecolonialtothepostcolonial