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ID167249
Title ProperNew school in the study of India?
LanguageENG
AuthorDe Roover, Jakob
Summary / Abstract (Note)By arguing that a new ‘School’ is crystallising in the study of India, Deborah Sutton (2018, “So called caste: S. N. Balagangadhara, the Ghent School and the Politics of grievance.” Contemporary South Asia 26 (3): 336–349) has brought to the surface phenomena that are typical of any encounter between competing research traditions. Some difficulties of understanding are caused by conceptual change: in the dominant research tradition, ‘Hinduism’ and ‘the caste system’ refer to structures that exist in Indian society; in the research programme developed by Balagangadhara, these terms designate experiential entities embedded in a western cultural experience of India. This conceptual divide also extends to the empirical: because the study of caste and Hinduism is collapsing under the weight of accumulated anomalies, certain problems are crucial to the alternative theorising of the Ghent School, whereas they seem irrelevant to the dominant tradition. Sutton engages in the polemics characteristic of confrontations between competing research traditions. She distorts and domesticates unfamiliar ideas from this School by mapping them onto notions familiar to her. Consequently, she confuses Balagangadhara’s hypotheses about colonial consciousness with hackneyed stories about ‘Orientalism’. The article concludes with a puzzle: Why does Sutton recognise a group of researchers as a new School, while trying to dismiss them as ‘acolytes’ who reproduce the ‘mantras’ and ‘dogmas’ of an Indian thinker?
`In' analytical NoteContemporary South Asia Vol. 27, No.2; Jun 2019: p.273-285
Journal SourceContemporary South Asia Vol: 27 No 2
Key WordsCaste ;  Hinduism ;  Indian Culture ;  Ghent School ;  Balagangadhara ;  Research Traditions


 
 
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