Engaging with Discourse on Caste, Class and Politics in India

This article maps the changing profile of pre-Mandal and post-Mandal debates on caste, class and politics in India, showing that the centrality of caste as an agent of politics and its dominant role in public-political life has remained a reality throughout. What is contested now is the extent to wh...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSouth Asia research Vol. 27; no. 3; pp. 333 - 353
Main Author Pankaj, Ashok K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published B-42, Panchsheel Enclave, New Delhi SAGE Publications 01.11.2007
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Summary:This article maps the changing profile of pre-Mandal and post-Mandal debates on caste, class and politics in India, showing that the centrality of caste as an agent of politics and its dominant role in public-political life has remained a reality throughout. What is contested now is the extent to which recognition of caste as an instrument of socio-political change (following the Mandal Commission) and caste-centric socio-political movements of the 1980s and 1990s (the Dalit and Backward Class movements) has reinforced caste-centric public-political life by giving it a modern value and a secular purpose. The article argues that the contemporary elaborate discourses on caste, class, and politics in India should seek to develop new paradigms for the discussion of caste and should interrogate more vigorously the democratic and secular roles of caste in relation to class and politics.
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ISSN:0262-7280
1741-3141
DOI:10.1177/026272800702700305