Recasting Caste: From the Sacred to the Profane

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Recasting Caste confronts the mainstream sociology of caste at its root: Louis Dumont's Homo Hierarchicus and its main source, Max Weber's distinction between class and status. Conventional wisdom on caste is idealist, and most students of the subject therefore exaggerate ritual homogeneity and deflect attention from intracaste differentiation and inequality. In contrast, by focusing on intracaste differences, Professor Singh demonstrates that caste hierarchy is grounded in a monopoly of land rights and political power supported by religious and secular ideology. Drawing on the sociological, anthropological and historical literature, as well as primary sources, Recasting Caste refutes the widespread claim that, in India, caste consciousness always trumps class consciousness. It questions the twin myths that caste is a product of Hinduism and that caste is essential to the survival of Hinduism. It thereby reorients the entire field of study.

Author(s): Hira Singh
Publisher: SAGE Publications India
Year: 2014

Language: English

Cover
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 - Studying Caste
2 - Priest and Prince
3 - Varna to Caste
4 - Caste and Subaltern Studies
5 - Inequalities between and within Castes
6 - Changing Land Relations and Caste
7 - Indenture, Religion and Caste
Appendices
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
About the Author