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ID118904
Title ProperRailway to the moon
Other Title Informationthe post-histories of a Sri Lankan railway line
LanguageENG
AuthorThiranagama, Sharika
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper takes as its subject the 1905 opening and 1990 closure of the Northern Railway Line, the major Sri Lankan railway which ran the length of the island from south to north. It argues that it can been seen as a social compact in which the life of the individual, the community, and the state became integrally intertwined. It focuses on two dimensions of what the Northern Railway Line enabled in Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon): first, a physical and symbolic representation of stateness, and, secondly, the pursuit of mundane everyday life. These are embedded within Sri Lanka's landscapes and histories of colonial and post-colonial rule, and the ethnic conflict, riots, and war which inextricably shaped the railway's journeys and passengers. Railways are more often thought of as large-scale, high-tech artefacts rather than the smaller everyday technologies that are the themes of other papers in this special issue. However, this paper highlights the ways in which railways also make particular kinds of everyday life possible and how, in being woven into routine daily and weekly journeys, the Northern Railway Line came to intertwine the changing circumstances and histories of its mainly Tamil passengers within an increasingly ethnicized national landscape. In the aftermath of its closure, the railway has now come to symbolize a desire for a return to the normalcy of the past, an aspiration to an everyday experience that younger generations have never had, and which has, in consequence, become a potent force.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 46, No.1; Jan 2012: p.221-248
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 46, No.1; Jan 2012: p.221-248
Key WordsNorthern Railway Line ;  Sri Lanka Railway ;  Sri Lanka ;  Community ;  Tamil Passengers