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Hindi Dalit Autobiography: an Exploration of Identity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 January 2007

SARAH BETH
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge

Abstract

Several powerful constructions of Dalit social and political identity are now circulating in very influential ways within the public sphere in North India, as various groups including both the Bahujan Samaj Party as well as Hindutva organisations compete to assert their influence over how these identities are defined, who they include, and what they mean. In this context, the rise of Hindi Dalit autobiographies as a source of Dalit cultural identity becomes especially important in North India, as they contest traditional conceptions of the Dalit community as ‘untouchables’ and attempt to re-inscribe Dalit identity in positive, self-assertive terms. However, Dalit autobiographies retain certain ambivalences, as the authors struggle to reconcile their low-caste identity with their current urban middle-class status, and more recently, as their claims to represent all members of the Dalit community are challenged by Dalits of the younger generation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2007 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

Many thanks to Francesca Orsini, Vasudha Dalmia, Emma Reisz, Rachel Berger and Ben Hopkins for all their insightful and challenging comments on earlier drafts of this paper.