THE INTERPRETATION OF CASTE
Book Specification
Item Code: | IDH050 |
Author: | DECLAN QUIGLEY |
Publisher: | OXFORD INDIA PAPERBACKS |
Language: | English |
ISBN: | 0195651715 |
Pages: | 184 |
Cover: | Paperback |
Other Details | 8.4" X 5.4" |
Book Description
Sociologists tend to argue that caste the caste is an extreme form of social stratification where the individual' social position is fixed at birth and cannot be changed. But why this should be so is usually left mysteriously vague. Anthropologists tend to explain caste in terms of indigenous ideas-in particular those which relate concepts of purity and impurity and the relation between religious status and
Drawing on a wide range of source as well as four years' fieldwork, Quigley argues that neither of these approaches makes adequate sense of the historical and ethnographic evidence, and proposes a comparative approach which looks at caste in terms of complex agrarian societies generally. Caste, he argues, is the result of a tension between opposing forces. On the one hand there is a push towards centralization which is seen most clearly in royal rituals and dominant caste institutions which are the legacy of pre-colonial kingship. Against this there is a pull towards decentralization which is manifested in the continued power which kinship groups exert over their members t the expense of other forms of association. A masterly critique of the most commonly held theories of caste, this book is essential reading for sociologists, anthropologists, political scientists, and all others.
This is, quite simply, an excellent book on caste: refined enough for the specialist, robust and clear enough for the generalist this book will set the empirical cat amongst the theoretical pigeons. The wider ramifications of this work are important too.' - Asian Affairs.
About the Author
Declan Quigley was previously at the Universities of Cambridge and Belfast. He is now a member of the Department of social Anthropology in St Andrews, Scotland, U.K. He has edited with David Gellner, Contested Hierarchies: a Collaborative Ethnography of Caste in the
List of figures and Table | ix | |
1 | THE PROBLEM BEFORE DUMONT | 1 |
The Entrenched view of Caste | 1 | |
The Word 'Caste' | 4 | |
Is Caste an Orientalist Construct? | 12 | |
2 | DUMONT'S THEORY OF CASTE | 21 |
Epistemology and Sociology | 21 | |
The Distinctiveness of Caste | 25 | |
Status, Power, and Encompassment | 30 | |
The Structuralist Interpretation of Caste | 31 | |
Dumont's View of Empiricism | 35 | |
Dumont's Critique of His Critics | 37 | |
3 | THE PROBLEM WITH DUMONT'S SOLUTION | 39 |
Why the Problem is not Simply about Caste | 39 | |
The Sociological Bridge Between Traditional and Modern Societies | 41 | |
Power and Legitimacy | 45 | |
Structuralism | 52 | |
THE PURE BRAHMAN AND THE IMPURE PRIEST | 54 | |
The Ideal Brahman in the Real world | 54 | |
Priests and 'Others' as Vessels of Inauspiciousness | 68 | |
The Limits of Transcendence | 82 | |
5 | CASTE AND KINSHIP | 87 |
Hypergamy | 87 | |
Isogamy | 101 | |
Hierarchy and Endogamy | 111 | |
6 | CASTE AND KINSHIP: HOCART'S THEORY | 114 |
Kings and Priests | 114 | |
Problems with Hocart's Theory | 122 | |
The Ideologies of Caste | 131 | |
7 | THE COURTS OF KINGS AND WASHERMEN | 142 |
A Model of Caste Systems | 142 | |
The Explanation of Caste | 158 | |
Bibliography | 171 | |
Index | 181 |