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ID187282
Title ProperSantal indigenous knowledge, cultural heritage, and the politics of representation
LanguageENG
AuthorCarrin, Marine
Summary / Abstract (Note)Using different archives, I show how indigeneity was constructed by the Santal themselves during the second half of the nineteenth century, through various figures such as rebels and prophets. This has produced a Santal indigenous knowledge at the interface of orality and writing, revolving around two dimensions—an emergent historical consciousness and a feeling of shared identity, which still informs Adivasi resistance today, enabling them to voice assertion over natural resources. The sacralization of the landscape through pilgrimages and ritual commemorations entails the liberation of formerly encompassed identities, allowing the subaltern communities a certain visibility in the public sphere. Providing a new imagining against dispossession and memory loss, indigenous knowledge, which combines multi-scripturality and ritual innovations, becomes a resource for politics of representation as well as of a common Santal identity.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 56, No.5; Sep 2022: p.1438 - 1463
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2022-10 56, 5
Key WordsIndigenous Knowledge ;  Santal ;  Indigeneity ;  Central India ;  Politics of Representation