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ID169999
Title ProperBlurring Bovine Boundaries
Other Title InformationCow Politics and the Everyday in South India
LanguageENG
AuthorStaples, James
Summary / Abstract (Note)Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with butchers, cattle traders and beef eaters in South India, the aims of this paper are twofold. Firstly, it challenges two dominant assumptions made in respect of cattle slaughter and beef consumption in South Asia: one, that the beef trade directly concerns only Muslims, Dalits, Adivasis and Christians, and two, that respect for cattle is the near sole preserve of upper-caste Hindus. Secondly, given the strength of the empirical evidence against these two assumptions, it considers how such a stark framing of the debates along caste and communal lines has been sustained so successfully and for so long. Using insights from the anthropology of ignorance—to which this article makes a unique contribution—I argue that part of the answer lies in the strategic acts of not knowing what goes on at particular junctures along the chain from the cowshed to the dinner plate, which a number of different actors are complicit in working to maintain.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 42, No.6; Dec 2019: p.1125-1140
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2019-12 42, 6
Key WordsPolitics ;  India ;  Hindu Nationalism ;  Anthropology ;  Beef ;  Ignorance ;  Cows ;  Butchers