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Alcoholics Anonymous: the Maoist movement in Jharkhand, India

Shah, Alpa ORCID: 0000-0003-1233-6516 (2011) Alcoholics Anonymous: the Maoist movement in Jharkhand, India. Modern Asian Studies, 45 (05). pp. 1095-1117. ISSN 0026-749X

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Identification Number: 10.1017/S0026749X1000020X

Abstract

From millenarian movements to the spread of Hindu rightwing militancy, attacks on adivasi (or tribal) consumption of alcohol have gone hand-in-hand with the project of ‘civilizing the savage’. Emphasizing the agency and consciousness of adivasi political mobilization, subaltern studies scholarship has historically depicted adivasis as embracing and propelling these reformist measures, marking them as a challenge to the social structure. This paper examines these claims through an analysis of the relationship between alcohol and the spread of the Maoist insurgency in Jharkhand, Eastern India. Similar to other movements of adivasi political mobilization, an anti-drinking campaign is part of the Maoist spread in adivasi areas. This paper makes an argument for focusing on the internal diversity of adivasi political mobilization—in particular intergenerational and gender conflicts—emphasizing the differentiated social meanings of alcohol consumption (and thus of prohibition), as well as the very different attitudes taken by adivasis towards the Maoist campaign. The paper thus questions the binaries of ‘sanskritisation’ versus adivasis assertion that are prevalent in subaltern studies scholarship, proposing an engagement with adivasi internal politics that could reveal how adivasi political mobilization contains the penetrations of dominant sanskritic values, limitations to those penetrations and other aspirations, such as the desire for particular notions of modernity.

Item Type: Article
Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X1000020X
Additional Information: © 2011 Cambridge University Press
Divisions: Anthropology
Subjects: G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > GN Anthropology
Date Deposited: 15 Feb 2013 09:21
Last Modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:15
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/48705

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