Debrahmanising History

Debrahmanising History

Product ID: 19007

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Author: Braj Ranjan Mani
Publisher: Manohar
Year: 2005
Language: English
Pages: 456
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8173046484

Description

Egalitarianism is neither alien to India nor the gift of the West.Marginalised people everywhere have always aspired to build an egalitarian world. Espousing the perspective of the non-elites, this book brings out the beauty and resilience of a counter- tradition by visiting some of the major sites of resistance and creativity from below. Ranged against caste and Brahmanism, this rational liberating tradition is to be found in the heterodoxies of various inclinations, particularly Buddhism, the movement of subaltern saint-poets, Sufism and Sikhism.

This legacy was carried forward in modern India by, more than anybody else, Phule, Iyothee Thass, Narayana Guru, Periyar, and Ambedkar. Recognising the power of the culture in the politics of transformation, they had emancipatory visions that embraced the whole of Indian experience, and stand firmly as an alternative to Tilak-Savarkrite, Gandhian, and Nehruvian visions. Their determined, but diverse and resourceless struggles, fought in the teeth of opposition from the caste elites, could not arrest the neo-brahmanism which under colonial patronage and the archaeology of knowledge derived from Orientalism went on to reincarnate- and nationalise- itself into octopus –like Hinduism. Their sublime failure adds to their enduring appeal to the marginalized as old forms of hierarchy and hegemony menacingly morph into new structure of inequality in post- 1947 India.

In some studies, the egalitarian orientation of this tradition is Belatedly being recognised, but it is seldom integrated with macro- level theoretical studies on Indian culture and society. An attempt in that direction, this searing critique of caste and dominant historiography is meant for all those who are-or want to be- part of the ongoing struggle of human liberation.

Contents

PREFACE

INTRODUCTION

1. Historical Roots of Brahmanic Dominance and Shramanic Resistance
2. Buddhist India: Against Caste and Brahmanism
3. Medieval Mukti Movements of the Subaltern Saint-Poets
4. Colonialism, and Birth of Vedic-Brahmanical Nationalism
5. Phule’s Struggle against Brahmanical Colonialism
6. Guru, Iyothee, Periyar, Acchutanand: Different Strategies, One Goal
7. Nationalist Power Politics, Excluded Masses and the Gandhi-Ambedkar Debate
8. Epilogue: Institutionalised Discrimination from the Past to the Democratic Present

NOTES

BIBLIOGRAPHY

INDEX