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Full Description
Living in the shadow of state is not a dark, static and silent world. It was the world in full radiance, involving multiple process of reenactment to life, lifeways and relationship. If state and history demonized the hill people as the 'pest' and 'nuisance' to civilization, and the hill practices as the 'relics' of the 'primitive', the hillmen's narratives celebrated them as their core cultural collective. Against State, Against History is a radical reevaluation of the dominant civilizational narratives on the 'tribe' and attempts to recast their history in the light of recent historiography that presents the hillmen as state evading population.
Bringing together both conventional and oral narratives, and from the counter-perspectives of the margin, the book explores the conditions in which section of valley population escaped to the hills, their migration history, how they reenact their space, society, culture and economy in the hills. Their physical dispersion in the highland terrain, choosing an independent village polity, defended by trained warriors, fortressed at the top of hills, connected by repulsive pathways, following jhum economy, and adopting a pliable social, cultural, ethnic and gender formations, are their counter cultural collective at the margins of state. They were reenacted to prevent state control and the emergence of domination relations in the hills. This process is understood as unstate involving the process of disowning state and becoming an egalitarian society where freedom of individuals was located at the core of their cultural collective.
Contents
List of Tables and Figures
Preface
List of abbreviations
Introduction
1. Enormous Dead Level: Daunting Geography, Rippling States
2. The Great Escape: Peopling the Blue Hills
3. Divided We Stand: Space, Settlement and Population Distribution Pattern
4. Pathways, Citadels and the Sentinels of the Hills
5. A Pleasurable Toil: Food, Freedom and Livelihood
6. Chiefs, Commoners and the Babel of Tongues
7. Between the Worlds Upside Down: Summoning Folktales
8. Renouncer, Restorer and Defender: Daughters of the Hills
9. Symbiotic Hill-Valley Relationship: Transactions of Space, Manpower and Resources
Conclusion: Disowning State, Becoming Egalitarian
Bibliography
Index
About the author



