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ID168819
Title ProperCow Politics
Other Title InformationSpatial Shifts in the Location of Slaughterhouses in Mumbai City
LanguageENG
AuthorMirza, Shireen
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article explores the spatial politics of situating slaughterhouses at the margins of Mumbai city enacted by the sanitary civic state and the caste labour of the butcher community. While the sanitary state mobilises colonial discourses of sanitation that deem animal slaughter unhygienic and so needing to be located at the shifting periphery of the city, an ethnography of the Muslim sub-castes of mutton and beef butchers suggests that animal slaughter is a form of caste labour that involves cultivating hereditary skills of working with flesh, bone and blood, which the Mumbai butchers refer to as ‘karigari’ (artisanship). Their caste labour is resisting the reconfiguration of the meat trade, which they view as fragmenting the community’s control over their labour. By bringing theories of urban space, state and caste among urban Muslims into the conversation, the article describes the ways in which scientific and communal ideas of sanitation are consolidated along a continuum. It also describes the ways in which caste and religion condense along an axis to form analogous structures that are deployed by the beef and mutton butchers to resist these spatial shifts.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 42, No.5; Oct 2019: p.861-879
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2019-10 42, 5
Key WordsUrban Space ;  Spatial Politics ;  Cow Slaughter ;  Butchering ;  Caste Among Indian Muslims ;  Caste Labour ;  Colonial Sanitary State ;  Spatial States