Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

Witches, Tea Plantations, and Lives of Migrant Laborers in India : Tempest in a Teapot, Hardback Book

Witches, Tea Plantations, and Lives of Migrant Laborers in India : Tempest in a Teapot Hardback

Hardback

Description

Witches, Tea Plantations, and Lives of Migrant Laborers in India: Tempest in Teapot is a unique book that brings together a holistic theoretical approach on the subject of witchcraft accusations, specifically those taking place inside a tea workers' community in India.

Using a combination of in-depth and extensive qualitative methods, and drawing on sociological, anthropological, and historical perspectives, Chaudhuri explores how adivasi (tribal) migrant workers use witchcraft accusations to deal with worker-management conflict.

Chaudhuri argues that witchcraft accusations can be interpreted as a periodic reaction of the adivasi worker community against their oppression by the plantation management.

The typical avenues of social protest are often unavailable to marginalized workers due to lack of organizational and political representation and resources.

As a result, the dain (witch) becomes a scapegoat for the malice of the plantation economy.

Within this discourse, witch hunts can be seen not as exotic and primitive rituals of a backward community, but rather as a powerful protest by a community against its oppressors.

The book attempts to understand the complex network of relationships—ties of friendship, family, politics, and gender—that provide the necessary legitimacy for the witch hunt to take place.

In most cases examined here, seemingly petty conflicts within the villagers often escalate to a hunt.

At the height of the conflict, the exploitative relationship between the plantation management and the adivasi migrant workers often gets hidden.

The book demonstrates how witchcraft accusations should be interpreted within this backdrop of labor-planters relationship, characterized by rigidity of power, patronage, and social distance. Witches, Tea Plantations, and Lives of Migrant Laborers in India should appeal to criminologists, sociologists, anthropologists, labor historians, gender scholars, labor migration scholars, witch hunt and witchcraft accusation global scholars, adivasi scholars, South Asian scholars, and anyone interested in India’s tribes, witchcraft accusations, gender in a global world, labor conflict, and Indian tea plantations.

Information

Other Formats

£88.00

 
Free Home Delivery

on all orders

 
Pick up orders

from local bookshops

Information