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ID106500
Title ProperSpoiled brides and the fear of education
Other Title Informationhonour and social mobility among dalits in South India
LanguageENG
AuthorStill, Clarinda
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper examines female education, marriage and honour among upwardly mobile Dalits. Using data collected during fifteen months of ethnographic fieldwork (2004-2005) in a Dalit community in rural Andhra Pradesh, I describe how families who constitute the upper strata of Dalits are educating their daughters in order to marry them 'upwards' within their caste to a groom with prospects of employment. Education allows these Dalit girls to become housewives, escaping a life of demeaning agricultural labour, colloquially: 'hard work in the hot sun'. But as educated wives they must have middle-class virtues to match. Unlike their labouring counterparts, their language, dress, movement and manners must convey shame and modesty. As their responsibility for maintaining family honour increases, they are progressively more scrutinised and controlled. I explore this heightened emphasis on honour among traditionally egalitarian Dalits and suggest reasons for the increasing concern about female sexuality. Education for girls is seen as a particularly risky business: on the one hand it provides opportunities for sexual encounters, but on the other hand it holds the promise of hypergamy. Given their already precarious circumstances, many Dalits choose to cut short the education of their daughters, rather than take the risk.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 5; Sep 2011: p1119-1146
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 5; Sep 2011: p1119-1146
Key WordsBrides ;  Education ;  Social Mobility ;  Dalits ;  South India ;  Sexual Encounters