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The decline of the caste question : the marginalization of Dalit politics in Bengal / Dwaipayan Sen.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, [2018]Description: xii, 305pContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781108417761 (alk. paper)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 305.56880954 Se551D 23
LOC classification:
  • DS422.C3 S39 2018
Contents:
Introduction : rethinking castelessness in mid-20th century Bengal -- Jogendranath Mandal, the politics of caste, and provincial autonomy, 1932-1937 -- Representation, education and agrarian reform : Jogendranath Mandal and the demands of Dalit politics, 1937-1943 -- A separate political existence : the making of the Bengal Scheduled Castes Federation, 1943-1945 -- "No matter how, Jogendranath had to be defeated" : the Scheduled Castes Federation and the partition of Bengal, 1945-1947 -- Betrayed expectations : East Pakistan and West Bengal, 1947-1950 -- "A caste Hindu state" : Jogendranath Mandal and the forced removal of Dalit refugees, 1950-1964 -- The decline of the caste question : the defeat of Dalit politics in Bengal, 1952-1968 -- Conclusion : "... the most casteist society in India."
Summary: "This book undertakes a critical reexamination of this seeming nationalist resolution of the caste question by scrutinizing the processes whereby the ironing out of caste- difference was produced and situating Mandal within them. It denaturalizes the self- evidence of Dalit integration by paying attention to how their political radicalization was contained. In so doing, it reorients the terms of reference through which Dalit politics in Bengal has been understood from preoccupations about proximity and integration with Indian nationalism, to an evaluation of the possibilities for and eventual failure of Dalit political power. My concerns are therefore trained at the specific issue of how and why the caste question, as formulated by Mandal, eventually found no fertile terrain in the east. The historical and contemporary relevance of the matter stems from the fact that wherever such politics has made its presence felt in the legislative institutions of independent India - whether the Republican Party of India or the Bahujan Samaj Party - it has done so under the sign and inspiration of Ambedkar, animated by concerns of Dalit political autonomy. An examination of Mandal's historical trajectory is therefore essential to this endeavor. I thereby share the conceit that it is equally the "spokesman who creates the group" than the other way around. As this book will suggest, the eventual failure of his political struggle, following as it did on a remarkably vibrant phase, is an instructive and meaningful one. His exceptionality is precisely what enables this revisionist attempt to tell a crucial chapter in the largely untold story of what Partha Chattopadhyay has called Bengal's 'social counter- revolution'"-- Provided by publisher.
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Books Library and Documentation Division 305.56880954 Se551D (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 110966

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction : rethinking castelessness in mid-20th century Bengal -- Jogendranath Mandal, the politics of caste, and provincial autonomy, 1932-1937 -- Representation, education and agrarian reform : Jogendranath Mandal and the demands of Dalit politics, 1937-1943 -- A separate political existence : the making of the Bengal Scheduled Castes Federation, 1943-1945 -- "No matter how, Jogendranath had to be defeated" : the Scheduled Castes Federation and the partition of Bengal, 1945-1947 -- Betrayed expectations : East Pakistan and West Bengal, 1947-1950 -- "A caste Hindu state" : Jogendranath Mandal and the forced removal of Dalit refugees, 1950-1964 -- The decline of the caste question : the defeat of Dalit politics in Bengal, 1952-1968 -- Conclusion : "... the most casteist society in India."

"This book undertakes a critical reexamination of this seeming nationalist resolution of the caste question by scrutinizing the processes whereby the ironing out of caste- difference was produced and situating Mandal within them. It denaturalizes the self- evidence of Dalit integration by paying attention to how their political radicalization was contained. In so doing, it reorients the terms of reference through which Dalit politics in Bengal has been understood from preoccupations about proximity and integration with Indian nationalism, to an evaluation of the possibilities for and eventual failure of Dalit political power. My concerns are therefore trained at the specific issue of how and why the caste question, as formulated by Mandal, eventually found no fertile terrain in the east. The historical and contemporary relevance of the matter stems from the fact that wherever such politics has made its presence felt in the legislative institutions of independent India - whether the Republican Party of India or the Bahujan Samaj Party - it has done so under the sign and inspiration of Ambedkar, animated by concerns of Dalit political autonomy. An examination of Mandal's historical trajectory is therefore essential to this endeavor. I thereby share the conceit that it is equally the "spokesman who creates the group" than the other way around. As this book will suggest, the eventual failure of his political struggle, following as it did on a remarkably vibrant phase, is an instructive and meaningful one. His exceptionality is precisely what enables this revisionist attempt to tell a crucial chapter in the largely untold story of what Partha Chattopadhyay has called Bengal's 'social counter- revolution'"-- Provided by publisher.

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