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Special issue: Multiple worlds of the Adivasi. An introduction

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posted on 2025-04-14, 13:17 authored by Vinita DamodaranVinita Damodaran, S Dasgupta
On 6 December 1959, the image of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru inaugurating the Damodar Valley Corporation dam project in Bihar with a 15-year-old Adivasi girl called Budhini Manjhiyan was flashed across the national newspapers. This was an iconic moment in the national debate around development and change which was to dominate modern India on whether lands, predominately rural and tribal, were to be flooded to benefit the nation. Years later, in 2016, when the newspapers caught up with Budhini, she had returned to Jharkhand and was struggling to make ends meet for herself and her children. Her story resonates with the ways in which, in recent times, Adivasis are becoming increasingly visible as subjects in debates around indigeneity, identity, conversion, development, and climate change. The post-colonial Indian state and its allies, with a developmentalist agenda uppermost in their minds, have made loss of land, displacement, migration, and forced resettlement a part of Adivasi experiences. Forces of globalization, often in tandem with the policies of the Indian state, are engulfing marginal spaces. The increasingly powerful majoritarian narrative of the state subsumes alternate voices with easy nonchalance. The foregrounding of planetary narratives on the fate of humanity in the era of the Anthropocene erases the importance of particular locales and specific communities that could offer an alternative to declensionist narratives. But amid this marginalization, there also lies a story of the assertion of Adivasi agency. Voices of Adivasis - although multiple and fractured - can be heard as they assert their identity, express their politics, and creatively negotiate with the state and its institutions. Scattered across India in geographically differentiated terrains, pursuing different occupations, and speaking different languages, the experiences of Adivasis are varied, as they inhabit many worlds. Their stories point to the multiplicity of cultures and myriad ways of thinking that must be accommodated within the ambit of the nation, and yet offer the possibilities of different ways of living and being on this earth.

Funding

Science and the colonies; Hidden Networks of Botanical Science, Ecology and Eugenics at the End of Empire : AHRC-ARTS & HUMANITIES RESEARCH COUNCIL | AH/W009161/1

The Botanical and Meteorological history of the Indian Ocean 1500-1900 : Arts and Humanities Research Council | AH/P005217/1

Collaborative research on the meterological and botanical history of the Indian ocean, 1600-1900. : Arts and Humanities Research Council | AH/J008559/1

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Publication status

  • Published

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  • Published version

Journal

Modern Asian Studies

ISSN

0026-749X

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Issue

5

Volume

56

Page range

1353-1374

Department affiliated with

  • History Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

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  • Yes

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