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ID165935
Title ProperRural Civilities: Caste, Gender and Public Life in Kerala
LanguageENG
AuthorThiranagama, Sharika
Summary / Abstract (Note)This essay investigates how public life in Kerala is shaped by spatially distributed gendered caste practices. The essay first investigates rural publics, such as rural libraries, and suggests that forms of progressive civility in seemingly caste-free associational publics should be understood not as the elimination of caste practices but their reconstitution. Second, while it is commonly accepted that caste is naturally practised in the ‘private’, I suggest that these ‘privates’ are in fact what I call a ‘private–public’ and are spatially and socially shaped by gender and caste. I argue that ideas of civility and democracy need to understand experiences of forms of civility and incivility as constituted in private–publics rather than only in the formal associational public.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 42, No.2; Apr 2019: p.310-327
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2019-06 42, 2
Key WordsCaste ;  Space ;  Libraries ;  Gender ;  Civility ;  Dalits ;  Neighbourhood ;  Kerala ;  Rural ;  Public ;  Private