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ID126659
Title ProperChoosing the Gorkha
Other Title Informationat the crossroads of class and ethnicity in the Darjeeling hills
LanguageENG
AuthorChettri, Mona
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Darjeeling hills in northern West Bengal, India are being demanded as a homeland for the Gorkha community living in India. While the origin of Darjeeling is steeped in the imperial legacy of the British Raj, the Gorkha, a colonial construct is ironically used as a means to challenge the contemporary political regression and neo-colonisation of Darjeeling. Although the Gorkha identity is deemed as representative of the Nepali community residing in India, it acquires special meaning and importance in the Darjeeling hills, where majority of the people suffer low wages, unemployment, underdevelopment and poverty. In spite of a large working force in the tea estates, economic underdevelopment and political disempowerment is voiced through the assertion of ethnic rather than a class-based identity. Through an examination of the interaction between class and ethnicity, the Gorkha identity will highlight the malleability of ethnicity to extend itself to any situation and the emergence of an ethnic identity from class relations and grievances.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Ethinicity Vol.14, No.3; June 2013; p.293-308
Journal SourceAsian Ethinicity Vol.14, No.3; June 2013; p.293-308
Key WordsEthnicity ;  Colonisation ;  Class ;  State ;  Politics ;  Gorkha Community ;  Darjeeling Hills ;  West Bengal ;  India ;  Border Security ;  Internal Security ;  State Politics ;  Nepali Community ;  Contemporary Political Regression ;  Imperial Legacy ;  Colonial Construct ;  Ethnic Identity


 
 
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