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ID170001
Title ProperProvincialising the Cow
Other Title InformationBuffalo–Human Relationships
LanguageENG
AuthorHardy, Kathryn C
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper examines the ritual and everyday practices of a family of buffalo-keeping Yadavs in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh. Water buffalo and indigenous Indian cattle are described as biologically and socially distinct beings: buffalo are economic animals, favoured for milk production, but ritually devalued and legally killable; cattle are sacred, protected from slaughter. Cows have historically been the animals central to public imaginations of Hindu belonging in scholarship and popular politics. But buffalo, not cows, are the animals central to Yadav self-making. This paper shows how heterodox bovine beliefs and everyday practices knit buffalo into a capacious Hindu interspecies world that subverts contemporary cow politics.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 42, No.6; Dec 2019: p.1156-1172
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2019-12 42, 6
Key WordsCaste ;  Hinduism ;  Cows ;  Bovine Politics ;  Buffalo ;  Multispecies Ethnography