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Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India
Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India
Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India
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Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India

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When thinking of India, it is hard not to think of caste. In academic and common parlance alike, caste has become a central symbol for India, marking it as fundamentally different from other places while expressing its essence. Nicholas Dirks argues that caste is, in fact, neither an unchanged survival of ancient India nor a single system that reflects a core cultural value. Rather than a basic expression of Indian tradition, caste is a modern phenomenon--the product of a concrete historical encounter between India and British colonial rule. Dirks does not contend that caste was invented by the British. But under British domination caste did become a single term capable of naming and above all subsuming India's diverse forms of social identity and organization.


Dirks traces the career of caste from the medieval kingdoms of southern India to the textual traces of early colonial archives; from the commentaries of an eighteenth-century Jesuit to the enumerative obsessions of the late-nineteenth-century census; from the ethnographic writings of colonial administrators to those of twentieth-century Indian scholars seeking to rescue ethnography from its colonial legacy. The book also surveys the rise of caste politics in the twentieth century, focusing in particular on the emergence of caste-based movements that have threatened nationalist consensus.



Castes of Mind is an ambitious book, written by an accomplished scholar with a rare mastery of centuries of Indian history and anthropology. It uses the idea of caste as the basis for a magisterial history of modern India. And in making a powerful case that the colonial past continues to haunt the Indian present, it makes an important contribution to current postcolonial theory and scholarship on contemporary Indian politics.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 9, 2011
ISBN9781400840946
Castes of Mind: Colonialism and the Making of Modern India

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    Castes of Mind - Nicholas B. Dirks

    CASTES OF MIND

    CASTES OF MIND

    COLONIALISM AND THE MAKING

    OF MODERN INDIA

    Nicholas B. Dirks

    Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University Press

    Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street,

    Princeton, New Jersey 08540

    In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press,

    3 Market Place, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1SY

    All Rights Reserved

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

    Dirks, Nicholas B., 1950–

    Castes of mind : colonialism and the making of

    modern India / Nicholas B. Dirks.

    p. cm.

    Includes bibliographical references and index.

    ISBN 0-691-08894-2 (alk. paper) — ISBN 0-691-08895-0 (pbk. : alk. paper)

    1. Caste—India. 2. Social classes—India. 3. India—

    History—British occupation, 1765–1947. I. Title.

    DS422.C3 D58     2001

    305.5′122′0954—dc21         2001021236

    British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available

    This book has been composed in Times Roman

    Printed on acid-free paper. ∞

    www.pup.princeton.edu

    Printed in the United States of America.

    10   9   8   7   6   5   4   3   2   1

    10   9   8   7   6   5   4   3   2   1

    (Pbk.)

    For Naki

    Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Abbreviations

    PART ONE: THE INVENTION OF CASTE

    One

    Introduction: The Modernity of Caste

    Two

    Homo Hierarchicus: The Origins of an Idea

    Three

    The Ethnographic State

    PART TWO: COLONIZATION OF THE ARCHIVE

    Four

    The Original Caste: Social Identity in the Old Regime

    Five

    The Textualization of Tradition: Biography of an Archive

    Six

    The Imperial Archive: Colonial Knowledge and Colonial Rule

    PART THREE: THE ETHNOGRAPHIC STATE

    Seven

    The Conversion of Caste

    Eight

    The Policing of Tradition: Colonial Anthropology and the Invention of Custom

    Nine

    The Body of Caste: Anthropology and the Criminalization of Caste

    Ten

    The Enumeration of Caste: Anthropology as Colonial Rule

    PART FOUR: RECASTING INDIA: CASTE, COMMUNITY, AND POLITICS

    Eleven

    Toward a Nationalist Sociology of India: Nationalism and Brahmanism

    Twelve

    The Reformation of Caste: Periyar, Ambedkar, and Gandhi

    Thirteen

    Caste Politics and the Politics of Caste

    Fourteen

    Conclusion: Caste and the Postcolonial Predicament

    Coda

    The Burden of the Past: On Colonialism and the Writing of History

    Notes

    Index

    Acknowledgments

    ALTHOUGH this book has in some ways grown quite naturally out of its predecessor, The Hollow Crown, it was not the book I had at first intended to write. I had spent a year at the India Office Library and Record Room in 1986 engaging in research on a Scottish antiquarian and collector, Colin Mackenzie, a man whose life and work is discussed in the fifth chapter but who plays a far less significant role in the story to follow than was my original plan. I had intended then to write a book on the early colonial archive: the collection, formation, and then transformation of early canons of British colonial knowledge concerning India, for which the Mackenzie collection was to be the centerpiece. Mackenzie, whose massive collection of vernacular texts and miscellaneous records from peninsular India—assembled by an extraordinary group of assistants and translators during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries—produced many of the texts used in my earlier study of local kingship and society in early modern southern India, still warrants a book of his own. Instead, I became preoccupied with one of the major absences in the early colonial archive: namely, caste. My study of the early colonial archive made it clear how peculiar the colonial fascination with caste from the middle of the nineteenth century on really was. I had already argued that caste—at least in the areas of southern India that I had studied intensively—was profoundly embedded within political society, not at all as it has been portrayed in contemporary anthropological literature. But, now that I could document this claim in much more extensive ways given the provenance of the Mackenzie collection, I soon became preoccupied with two central questions concerning the modern career of caste. First, I sought to understand how caste had come to exercise such pride of place in the colonial imagination. Second, I wanted to document the effects of this transformation on modern Indian society. If knowledge was both an effect and an instrument of power, as Foucault has suggested, it seemed necessary to write an account of caste that was both about ideas and their materialization in, and through, history.

    As the idea for this book began to take shape—amid a series of other research trips to India as well as back to London—the explosion of caste anxiety and violence around then Prime Minister V. P. Singh’s decision to implement the recommendations of the Mandal Commission in the summer of 1990, dramatically increasing quotas for Backward Caste representation in government and education, raised a third question. Would my effort to write a critical account of the colonial history of caste become affiliated with critiques of Mandal? By extension, what was the relation between colonial critique and postcolonial politics in India? Although attention shifted from caste to the growing communalism of the 1990s, most dramatically around the Hindu nationalist assault on Babur’s mosque in Ayodhya, I kept my focus trained on the politics and history of caste in contemporary India. And I discovered that the question of caste brought together a wide range of historical, anthropological, and political concerns, even as it connected the two most distant points of my own scholarly relationship to India. As an undergraduate, I had begun to study Indian history through the figure of E. V. Ramaswamy Naicker and his relation to Gandhi and Indian nationalism, on the one hand, and the extraordinary history of caste politics in southern India, on the other. At the point that I began to draft the manuscript that makes up this book, I found myself convening the seminar at Columbia University where B. R. Ambedkar had presented his first critique of caste. The critical visions of E.V.R. and Ambedkar made it possible for me to connect the first two questions of this book with the third.

    I have been extremely fortunate during the fifteen years of this book’s gestation to have the support of a variety of institutions and individuals. The California Institute of Technology, the University of Michigan, and Columbia University have all supported the research and writing of parts of this book, as have the Social Science Research Council (1986), the Guggenheim Foundation (1989–1991), the American Institute for Indian Studies (1989; 1991), and the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (1989–1990). I am grateful to the staff of the following institutions where the research for this book was carried out: the India Office Library and Records, London; the library and archives of the School of Oriental and African Studies, London; the National Archives of India, New Delhi; the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi; the Tamil Nadu Archives, Madras; and the Government Oriental Manuscripts Library, University of Madras.

    Above all, this book owes its origin to the work and influence of my Ph.D. advisor, Bernard Cohn. Cohn’s work over many years has made clear how constitutive the history of colonial knowledge in general and the census in particular has been for modern understandings of caste. In his scholarship, his teaching, and his sustained and profound encouragement of this project, he has played a key role in making this book possible.

    Val Daniel and Gyan Prakash have been the most generous and loyal of intellectual comrades during the many years I have worked on this project. In addition to reading and commenting on just about everything else I have written over the years, they read and gave detailed comments and suggestions on an earlier version of the manuscript. Partha Chatterjee, whom I came to know when he invited me to a conference in Calcutta in 1989, where I gave an early version of Chapter 8, has also been an invaluable intellectual partner since then, even as his provocative suggestions about colonial modernity and post-colonial politics in India have made this effort to understand caste seem worthwhile long after I started it. Peter van der Veer provided several opportunities to present and discuss parts of this work over the last decade and has been a terrific interlocutor and critic. David Ludden has also been supportive throughout the project, and a continuous source of material, insight, advice, and friendship.

    During my years at the University of Michigan, Tom Trautmann was not only the finest colleague any academic could hope to have but also a regular source of detailed help on specific aspects of the history of Orientalism in India. My early efforts on the history of caste were encouraged by many wonderful colleagues at Michigan, including Bill Sewell, Geoff Eley, Ray Grew, Fred Cooper, Fernando Coronil, and Sally Humphreys. Sherry Ortner was one of the first to welcome me to Michigan and has supported this project and argued about it with me ever since. I worked closely with Ann Stoler, whose shared interests in colonial archives helped me formulate some of the concerns that animate this book. I was fortunate that Gyan Pandey spent two semesters at the University of Michigan, making him a captive (and yet always generous) audience for my developing ideas, especially when I could entice him to a local pub.

    Gananath Obeyesekere, a resolutely unanonymous reader for Princeton University Press, gave me wonderful feedback, and important advice, about the manuscript; I am in his debt, even if I have not always heeded his remarks as much as I should have. Arjun Appadurai has been generative in working through many of the questions that we both began to ask when studying with Bernard Cohn at the University of Chicago. Mahmood Mamdani lugged my manuscript to Kampala and gave me the benefit of his extraordinary reading of the argument and material in the context of his own important work on the legacies of colonial history in Africa. Aamir Mufti was especially encouraging and suggestive in his responses to my efforts to relate the question of caste to the subject of minorities.

    Joan Scott and Clifford Geertz invited me to deliver versions of what have become the first and last chapters at the Thursday Seminar in the Institute for Advanced Study (in 1990 and 1999, respectively), and on each occasion made helpful and encouraging comments. Tom Laqueur and Stephen Greenblatt first asked me to publish an early version of this project in Representations (in 1992). The late Burton Stein, who would have preferred that I wrote the book on Mackenzie, was always supportive of my work even (perhaps especially) when he disagreed with me; he always provided me with a home away from home when I was in London. Jean-Claude Galey hosted me for a semester at the Ecole des Hautes Études in Paris in 1992 and engaged me in constant and scintillating debate on questions around history, caste, and Louis Dumont, all the while plying me with wonderful food, wine, and gossip.

    Other colleagues and friends have played important roles at various points in this project. Ranajit Guha read large parts of the manuscript and made enthusiastic comments. Stanley Tambiah read and commented on papers based on several chapters with his characteristic insight and encouragement. Judy Walkowitz helped to deepen my sense of British history while making many suggestions about the history of British social and anthropological theory. Chris Fuller and Jonathan Parry have been worthy critics and warm hosts, both when I was an academic visitor at the London School of Economics and Political Science in 1986 and during my visits to London since then. Shahid Amin has discussed William Crooke and colonial sociology more generally over the years, at the same time that his own work has been a model for the historical anthropology of South Asia. Dharma Kumar provided me with a home in New Delhi and with robust and witty argument whenever we met. Anjan Ghosh did me the honor of being my student, while giving me the benefit of his extraordinary erudition and interest over the course of much of this project.

    There are many others who have helped me in various ways with this book, engaging with my arguments, sponsoring me to give or publish papers, making arguments of their own that have forced me to rethink and expand my views, helping me with archives, and offering their encouragement. I would like especially to thank Lila Abu-Lughod, Amrita Basu, Laura Bear, Akeel Bilgrami, Carol Breckenridge, Natalie Davis, Nancy Farriss, Michael Fisher, Saloni Mathur, Tim Mitchell, M.S.S. Pandian, Peter Pels, Gloria Raheja, Arvind Rajagopal, Sumathi Ramaswamy, Anupama Rao, H. L. Seneviratne, Jonathan Spencer, and Tom Wolfe.

    I am grateful to my graduate students at the University of Michigan and Columbia University for their critical role in making this work seem worthwhile (though always subject to withering critique) from start to finish. I am especially indebted to the students who took my graduate seminar in the spring of 2000 for reading an earlier version of the manuscript; Arjun Mahey, Nauman Naqvi, and Nathaniel Roberts in particular made extraordinarily detailed and helpful comments on issues ranging from argument to style and organization. I have been lucky to have superb research assistants over the course of this project, including Pamila Gupta, Lisa Mitchell, Nauman Naqvi, Parna Sengupta, Vazira Zamindar, and Karin Zitzewitz.

    It has been a pleasure to work with Princeton University Press. I thank Walter Lippincott for his interest in this project since I first discussed it with him in 1988. Mary Murrell has facilitated the process at every stage and been a supportive and perceptive editor. Fred Appel has collaborated to keep the project moving along. And Margaret Case has been the most patient, and painstaking, of copyeditors.

    During the years that I finished this book, my daughter, Sandhya, left home to start a life of her own (wondering why her father never wrote that book he kept talking about), and my son, Ishan, was born, survived two long hospital stays in his first year, and learned the function of the delete key before his first word. Even when I have been most consumed by the writing of this book, both have done their best to remind me of the important things in life.

    Most of this book was written in the quiet and gentle sanctuary of the southern Berkshires over the last three summers. During that time, Janaki Bakhle not only insisted that I finally write this book (putting aside my more frivolous undertakings to concentrate on the great task of history) but has made it possible for me to do so. She has also read through repeated drafts of my work, giving me both my severest criticism and my most devoted approbation. In hopes of more of the same for many future books, I dedicate this book to her.

    Southfield, Massachusetts

    January, 2001

    Abbreviations

    Part One

    THE INVENTION OF CASTE

    One

    Introduction: The Modernity of Caste

    In that Country the laws of religion, the laws of the land, and the laws of honour, are all united and consolidated in one, and bind a man eternally to the rules of what is called his caste.

    —Edmund Burke¹

    Caste as India

    When thinking of India it is hard not to think of caste. In comparative sociology and in common parlance alike, caste has become a central symbol for India, indexing it as fundamentally different from other places as well as expressing its essence. A long history of writing—from the grand treatise of the Abbé Dubois to the general anthropology of Louis Dumont; from the piles of statistical and descriptive volumes of British colonial censuses starting in 1872 to the eye-catching headlines of the New York Times—has identified caste as the basic form of Indian society. Caste has been seen as omnipresent in Indian history and as one of the major reasons why India has no history, or at least no sense of history. Caste defines the core of Indian tradition, and it is seen today as the major threat to Indian modernity. If we are to understand India properly, and by implication if we are to understand India’s other core symbol—Hinduism—we must understand caste, whether we admire or revile it.

    In The Discovery of India, Jawaharlal Nehru wrote that Almost everyone who knows anything at all about India has heard of the caste system; almost every outsider and many people in India condemn it or criticize it as a whole. Nehru did not like the caste system any more than he admired the widely heralded spiritual foundations of Indian civilization, but even he felt ambivalence about it. Although he noted that caste had resisted not only the powerful impact of Buddhism and many centuries of Afghan and Mughal rule and the spread of Islam, as also the strenuous efforts of innumerable Hindu reformers who raised their voices against it, he felt that caste was finally beginning to come undone through the force of basic economic changes. And yet Nehru was not sure what all this change would unleash. The conflict is between two approaches to the problem of social organisation, which are diametrically opposed to each other: the old Hindu conception of the group being the basic unit of organisation, and the excessive individualism of the west, emphasizing the individual above the group.² In making this observation, Nehru neatly captured the conceptual contours of most recent debates over caste: he evaluated it in relation to its place as fundamental to Hinduism, as well as in terms of a basic opposition between the individual and the community, an opposition that has provided the bounds of most modern social theory and political imagining. This opposition constitutes the basic limit to most understandings of caste, both in the West and within India itself.

    Louis Dumont, the author of the most influential scholarly treatise on caste in the last half of the twentieth century, believed that the West’s excessive individualism was the single greatest impediment to the understanding of caste. Dumont began his book, Homo Hierarchicus, with a critique of individualism, claiming Marx and Durkheim as his sociological ancestors. For Dumont, "the true function of sociology is . . . to make good the lacuna introduced by the individualistic mentality when it confuses the ideal with the actual. . . . To the self-sufficient individual it [sociology] opposes man as a social being; it considers each man no longer as a particular incarnation of abstract humanity, but as a more or less autonomous point of emergence of a particular collective humanity, of a society."³ Dumont based his suspicion of modern individualism on Tocqueville’s analysis of American democracy, in which he noted that individualism . . . disposes each member of the community to sever himself from the mass of his fellow-creatures; and to draw apart with his family and his friends; so that, after he has thus formed a little circle of his own, he willingly leaves society at large to itself . . . not only does democracy make every man forget his ancestors, but it hides his descendents, and separates his contemporaries from him; it throws him back for ever upon himself alone, and threatens in the end to confine him entirely within the solitude of his own heart. Dumont thus began his study of caste in India by placing it at the center of the sociological endeavor, and aligning himself with Tocqueville’s critical lament about the rise of the novel idea of individualism.⁴

    For Dumont it is this same commitment to individualism, even within the sociological space of theorizing the social, that rejects the possibility that hierarchy, the core value behind the caste system, has not only been foundational for most societies but is naturally so. Dumont wrote that To adopt a value is to introduce hierarchy, and a certain consensus of values, a certain hierarchy of ideas, things and people, is indispensable to social life. . . . No doubt, in the majority of cases, hierarchy will be identified in some way with power, but there is no necessity for this, as the case of India will show. . . . In relation to these more or less necessary requirements of social life, the ideal of equality, even if it is thought superior, is artificial.⁵ Dumont made this point here in the service of a straightforward epistemological assertion, namely, that a Western audience (and as his prose makes clear, he could imagine no other) will misunderstand caste, and hierarchy, because of the modern denial of principles that seem opposed to individualism and equality. But his claims about the ideological foundations of hierarchical values in India—that India has always been mired in spiritual and otherworldly concerns—are not only deeply problematic, they are as old as Orientalism itself. For Dumont, caste is seen to express a commitment to social values that the modern world has lost, and it is hard not to read Dumont’s scholarship as a peculiar form of modern Western nostalgia, if with a long colonial pedigree. Dumont’s faith in a communitarian ideal may have little in common with Nehru’s anxiety about the demise of caste, but it asserts the view, largely shared in India as well as in the West, that caste is the sign of India’s fundamental religiosity, a marker of India’s essential difference from the West and from modernity at large.

    This book will ask why it is that caste has become for so many the core symbol of community in India, whereas for others, even in serious critique, caste is still the defining feature of Indian social organization. As we shall see, views of caste differ markedly: from those who see it as a religious system to those who view it as merely social or economic; from those who admire the spiritual foundations of a sacerdotal hierarchy to those who look from below and see the tyranny of Brahmans (all the more insidious because of the ritual mystifications that attend domination); from those who view it as the Indian equivalent of community to those who see it as the primary impediment to community. But an extraordinary range of commentators, from James Mill to Herbert Risley, from Hegel to Weber, from G. S. Ghurye to M. N. Srinivas, from Louis Dumont to McKim Marriott, from E. V. Ramaswamy Naicker to B. R. Ambedkar, from Gandhi to Nehru, among many others who will populate the text that follows, accept that caste—and specifically caste forms of hierarchy, whether valorized or despised—is somehow fundamental to Indian civilization, Indian culture, and Indian tradition.

    This book will address this question by suggesting that caste, as we know it today, is not in fact some unchanged survival of ancient India, not some single system that reflects a core civilizational value, not a basic expression of Indian tradition. Rather, I will argue that caste (again, as we know it today) is a modern phenomenon, that it is, specifically, the product of an historical encounter between India and Western colonial rule. By this I do not mean to imply that it was simply invented by the too clever British, now credited with so many imperial patents that what began as colonial critique has turned into another form of imperial adulation. But I am suggesting that it was under the British that caste became a single term capable of expressing, organizing, and above all systematizing India’s diverse forms of social identity, community, and organization. This was achieved through an identifiable (if contested) ideological canon as the result of a concrete encounter with colonial modernity during two hundred years of British domination. In short, colonialism made caste what it is today. It produced the conditions that made possible the opening lines of this book, by making caste the central symbol of Indian society. And it did its work well; as Nehru was powerfully aware, there is now no simple way of wishing it away, no easy way to imagine social forms that would transcend the languages of caste that have become so inscribed in ritual, familial, communal, socioeconomic, political, and public theaters of quotidian life.

    In the pages that follow I will trace the career of caste from the medieval kingdoms of southern India to the textual traces of early colonial archives; from the commentaries of an eighteenth-century Jesuit missionary to the enumerative obsessions of the late nineteenth-century census; from the ethnographic writings of colonial administrators and missionaries to those of twentieth-century Indian scholars. I will focus on early colonial efforts to know India well enough to rule it and profit by it, as they brought together the many strands of scientific curiosity, missionary frustration, Orientalist fascination, and administrative concerns with property and taxation in the service of, among other things, colonial governmentality.⁶ I will follow these conjunctural imperatives as they increasingly substituted statistical and ethnographical techniques for historical and textual knowledge, as they drew from an ample inheritance of Orientalist generalization to articulate the justifications for permanent colonial rule, and as they took on the racialized languages and conceits of late nineteenth-century imperial world systems. And I will illustrate some of the ways in which this history provided the frame for an alternative history of social reform and nationalist resistance which worked to throw out colonialism while absorbing from colonial encounters many of the terms and arguments of self-determination and self-government. I will also survey the rise of caste politics in the twentieth century, focusing in particular on the emergence of movements that threatened to fracture nationalist consensus even as they revealed the problematic charters, and entailments, of anticolonial nationalism. For the purposes of this book, this history will attain its apotheosis in the debates over the use of caste for social welfare in the postindependence contexts of reservations, quotas, and affirmative action.

    Specters of Caste

    It is impossible to write about India today, particularly when addressing issues concerning community, without referring to the current crisis over secularism and religious nationalism. The rise of Hindu fundamentalism has made it necessary to engage explicitly with the ways that Hinduism, as a set of ritual practices, a world religion, and an ethnic identity, has increasingly claimed India as its own. The uses of Hindutva as a political call to arms, and the demise of secularism as a legitimate national ideology, have led to a crisis that might make a book on caste seem beside the point. But it is in part because of the crisis around communalism that it is well worth directing some attention to the ways in which caste haunts discourses of community and nation in India today. This study will perforce address a range of concerns relevant to the current crisis. First, there is now general acceptance of the fact that the bitter debates over caste reservations were triggered by the implementation of the Mandal Commission Report by V. P. Singh in 1990. Once caste started to be used as the basis for denying rather than conferring social privilege, Hindu nationalists captured ground by calling for a notion of religious community to replace one of caste. Second, one of my arguments in this book will be that caste was configured as an encompassing Indian social system in direct relationship to the constitution of Hinduism as a systematic, confessional, all-embracing religious identity. Indeed, caste has generally been seen as fundamental to Hinduism—a curious irony in a context in which the problems of caste are today being used to justify the necessity of Hinduism as a noncontestatory form of community to cushion the turmoil of political modernity in India. My examination into the colonial history of caste will complement any investigation of the affiliation of religious identities with political communities in the current geopolitics of South Asia, even as it builds on the important suggestions of Gyanendra Pandey that religious communalism was also in large part a colonial construction.

    It is not as if the Hindu nationalists, any more than either fundamentalist or secularist reformers in days past, have managed to wish caste away. Caste continues to dominate Indian social worlds, even if in some larger political contexts it has been effaced by the conflict between Hindus and Muslims. In regions of India that witnessed particularly significant anti-Brahman (and by implication anticaste) political movements, as for example in what are today Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra, as well as in regions where caste provided the basis for lower-caste political mobilization, as for example in parts of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, caste seems to be as prominent a fact of social life as ever. Increasingly, all-India forms of Dalit (untouchable) politics carry on B. R. Ambedkar’s insistent identification of caste as the most powerful vehicle of dominance—ritual as well as political and economic—in India. At the same time, the process of what has been called the ethnicization, or substantialization, of caste, heralded by many social scientists as the necessary death of the old caste system (based as they thought it was on interdependency rather than conflict) has provided new mechanisms for the strengthening of caste identity. Caste may no longer convey a sense of community that confers civilizational identity to the Indian subcontinent, but it is still the primary form of local identity and, in certain contexts, from Dalits to Brahmans, translates the local into recognizably subcontinental idioms of association far more powerful than any other single category of community.

    Caste thus continues, even as it continues to trouble. But despite the tone here—and I will be critical of the British role in the reification of caste even as I am critical of those, Indian or Western, who advocate the values of the caste system—I do not seek to join the chorus of those who view caste as either emblematic of Indian civilization or as opposed to modernity. Although my principal concern will be to unravel the historical process that has worked to naturalize the idea of a (uniform, all-encompassing, ideologically consistent, Indologically conceived) caste system, I am particularly concerned to register my conviction that caste has at times been the necessary vehicle of social and political mobilization, even as it carries as many traces of the modern as the institutions it is said to inhibit or oppose. When figures such as Ambedkar in western India or Periyar in the south organized political movements around caste, they worked to transform both the cultural meanings and the political uses of caste in ways that went well beyond the colonial mandate. On occasion, caste has indeed been a worthy synonym of community in the best of senses, even if political movements have all too often failed to transcend in any way the problematic relationship of caste to exclusion. Nehru observed that In the constructive schemes that we may make, we have to pay attention to the human material we have to deal with, to the background of its thought and urges, and to the environment in which we have to function. To ignore all this and to fashion some idealistic scheme in the air, or merely to think in terms of imitating what others have done elsewhere, would be folly. It becomes desirable therefore to examine and understand the old Indian social structure which has so powerfully influenced our people.⁸ More to my point, since I can share neither Nehru’s precise pronouns nor his own political project, leave alone his understanding of caste, I would argue that caste endures and is so significant today because it has been the precipitate of a powerful history, in which it has been constituted as the very condition of the Indian social. This book is principally about the historicity of caste, the ways caste has come into being, and as such been conditioned by history to condition (and make conditional) any possibility of a future beyond, or without, caste.

    What follows is principally about the colonial role in the historical construction of caste. I argue that the history in which caste has been constituted as the principal modality of Indian society draws as much from the role of British Orientalists, administrators, and missionaries as it does from Indian reformers, social thinkers, and political actors. Indeed, my argument is about the power of the colonial leviathan to produce caste as the measure of all social things, a feat that could not have been accomplished had caste not become one of the most important emblems of tradition (the not-so-obscure object of desire for many Westerners and Indians alike, across the full course of India’s modern history) at the same time as it was a core feature of colonial power/knowledge. And yet this is not a simple story of either epistemic domination or of elite collaboration. This book not only culminates in the heroic attempts by Ambedkar and Periyar to change the terms of caste; it builds on the work of critics of colonial modernity such as Ranajit Guha and Partha Chatterjee, who have been as concerned to chart new historical patterns of influence as they have been to find new ways to chart alternative futures. Guha, whose work has ranged from his brilliant intellectual history of the Bengal Permanent Settlement to his more recent studies of anticolonial insurgency and the manifold historical entailments of colonial domination, has both demonstrated the power of colonial rule and the need to write not just against but beyond colonialism.⁹ And Chatterjee has always insisted on the need to chart the history of colonized negotiations with both the brutality of foreign domination and the spectral hail of the modern. Drawing inspiration from these and many other scholars, I hope to weave an argument far more complicated than that the British invented caste, though in one sense this is precisely what happened. But when I assert the power of colonial history I do so in the wake of the now canonic demonstrations by Bernard Cohn and Edward Said of the hegemonic character of colonial rule on the history of the colonized.¹⁰

    We now know that colonial conquest was not just the result of the power of superior arms, military organization, political power, or economic wealth—as important as these things were. Colonialism was made possible, and then sustained and strengthened, as much by cultural technologies of rule as it was by the more obvious and brutal modes of conquest that first established power on foreign shores. The cultural effects of colonialism have until recently been too often ignored or displaced into the inevitable logics of modernization and world capitalism; and this only because it has not been sufficiently recognized that colonialism was itself a cultural project of control. Colonial knowledge both enabled conquest and was produced by it; in certain important ways, knowledge was what colonialism was all about. Cultural forms in societies newly classified as traditional were reconstructed and transformed by this knowledge, which created new categories and oppositions between colonizers and colonized, European and Asian, modern and traditional, West and East. Through the delineation and reconstitution of systematic grammars for vernacular languages, the control of Indian territory through cartographic technologies and picturesque techniques of rule, the representation of India through the mastery and display of archaeological mementos and ritual texts, the taxing of India through the reclassification and assessment of land use, property form, and agrarian structure, and the enumeration of India through the statistical technology of the census, Britain set in motion transformations every bit as powerful as the better-known consequences of military and economic imperialism.¹¹

    Most saliently for the argument here, British colonialism played a critical role in both the identification and the production of Indian tradition. Current debates about modernity and tradition fail to appreciate the extent to which the congeries of beliefs, customs, practices, and convictions that have been designated as traditional are in fact the complicated byproduct of colonial history. Bernard Cohn has argued that the British simultaneously misrecognized and simplified things Indian, imprisoning the Indian subject into the typecast role it assigned under the name of tradition: In the conceptual scheme which the British created to understand and to act in India, they constantly followed the same logic; they reduced vastly complex codes and their associated meanings to a few metonyms. . . . India was redefined by the British to be a place of rules and orders; once the British had defined to their own satisfaction what they construed as Indian rules and customs, then the Indians had to conform to these constructions.¹² Edward Said has illuminated the process through which the Orient was Orientalized precisely because of the byzantine reinforcements of colonial power and knowledge.¹³ Partha Chatterjee has called this general process the colonial rule of difference: referring thereby to the historical fact that colonialism could only justify itself if under the regime of universal history it encountered the limit of alterity, the social fact that India must always be ruled because it could never be folded into a universal narrative of progress, modernity, and, ultimately, Europe. To the extent this complex of power and knowledge was colonial, he tells us, the forms of objectification and normalization of the colonized had to reproduce, within the framework of a universal knowledge, the truth of colonial difference.¹⁴

    It is here that we come up against the special perversity of colonial modernity, for the traditional was produced precisely within the historical relationship between the colonizer and the colonized. The colonizer held out modernity as a promise but at the same time made it the limiting condition of coloniality: the promise that would never be kept. The colonized could be seduced by the siren of the modern but never quite get there, mired necessarily (if colonialism was to continue to legitimate itself) in a traditional world.¹⁵ On the other side of the colonial divide, the colonized, sometimes in direct reaction to the colonial lie of universality, would appropriate tradition as resistance and as refuge, but under conditions of colonial modernity tradition was simultaneously devalued and transformed. As a result, tradition too suffered from loss, even as it was tainted by its evident historicity. In the case of caste, many Indian social reformers and critics mistook this history as linear decline, the degradation of a noble system into a corrupt structure of power and dominant interests. Only a few, most notably the extraordinary sociologist G. S. Ghurye, blamed colonialism.¹⁶ But whatever the argument, attempts at historical recuperation typically took the form of finding an Orientalist golden age, a time when caste was an ideal system of mutual responsibility, reasoned interdependence, and genuine spiritual authority. Only a few non-Brahman and Dalit voices rejected this kind of Orientalist nostalgia, all the while feeling increasingly trapped by the demands of anticolonial nationalism to downplay, and defer, all critiques of Indian culture and civilization.

    The Indian Political

    Perhaps the most troubling legacy of the colonial idea of a golden age is the disavowal (shared in large part by nationalist thought) of the political forms and affiliations that were an important part of India’s precolonial history. It is this last concern that was the subject of my previous study, The Hollow Crown, which took as its focus the social and political fortunes of a small kingdom in southern India from the seventeenth to the early twentieth century. I argued that until the emergence of British colonial rule in southern India [and by implication India at large] the crown was not so hollow as it has generally been made out to be. Kings were not inferior to Brahmans; the political domain was not encompassed by a religious domain. State forms, while not fully assimilated to western categories of the state, were powerful components in Indian Civilization. Indian society, indeed caste itself, was shaped by political struggles and processes.¹⁷ The vital world of political action and community was, in fact, overtaken by colonial rule, and public life became increasingly defined as Western at the same time that the promise of universal modernity became more and more marked in national and racial terms. Meanwhile, public life was emptied of all traditional components—as old forms of politics were condemned as feudal and old forms of association rendered atavistic. The permanent Zamindari settlements of Bengal and Madras, and the intractable histories leading to indirect rule of one form or another in one-third of India (leaving princely states intact), produced a hollow simulacrum of India’s ancient politics. The British maintained in style these kingdoms, which had facilitated colonial conquest, as lavish museums of old India. At the same time, these states were constant reminders of the justifications of British rule: India had been unable to rule itself because its political system was commanded by grand but quarrelling kings who would shamelessly exploit their subjects in order to accumulate unlimited wealth and prestige, and had neither attended to basic principles of justice nor concerned themselves with the formation of organized administration and stable, centralized power. Thus Britain sustained the fiction that it had walked into a vacuum and had conquered India, as the Cambridge imperial historian John Seeley said, in a fit of absence of mind, after which the British ruled India for the sake of its own subjects, rather than for any gain of their own.¹⁸ This astonishing failure of historical consciousness was, of course, justified through the attribution of a lack of history, and caste was taken as a sign thereof.

    These colonial narratives seemed justified by case after case in which landlords and princes would fail to exploit the economic opportunities afforded by permanent settlement and indirect rule; theater states grew up all over India in which issues of ceremonial and prestige, hierarchy and protocol, accumulation and expenditure seemed of far greater moment than either sound management or popular representation. A kind of embarrassment set in, I would suggest, in which it became difficult to point to recent history, and the vast estates and quasi-autonomous tracts under royal control, as arguments for national self-confidence—let alone self-rule. In cities like Calcutta, the elite was in large part supported by the profits that came from landlord rights to these same rural estates; in this environment, recognition of the power of the West became the basis both for what has been called colonial mimicry in areas ranging from political theory to cultural production and for the development of forms of resistance that were justified by the glorious past record of India’s civilizational achievement. A new vision, following what by now was an authoritative Orientalist script coauthored in many cases by those who accorded no particular prestige to political authority, celebrated the civilizational and spiritual achievements of old India. This vision did not address the political history of recent times; a conspicuous silence was maintained around the material basis of the vision’s own conditions of possibility. In thinking about the efflorescence of current debate around the subject of tradition, it is accordingly necessary to call again for the recuperation of that part of Indian tradition, or history, that had been compromised by the vain pomp, circumstance, and exploitation of colonial feudalism—not to argue return but rather to counter the otherworldliness of colonial fictions about history. It is time again to tell sad stories of the death of kings: how some have been deposed, some slain in war, some haunted by the ghosts they have deposed. . . . All murdered.¹⁹

    In subsequent chapters I shall say more about kings, and about the Indian political. The point here is to suggest that the death of kings cleared the way for the transformation of caste under colonial rule. Caste was refigured as a distinctly religious system, and the transformation had immense implications for everyday social life. The confinement of caste to the realm of religion enabled colonial procedures of rule through the characterization of India as essentially a place of spiritual harmony and liberation; when the state existed in India, so the argument went, it was despotic and epiphenomenal, extractive but fundamentally irrelevant. British rule could thus be characterized as enlightened when it denied Indian subjects even the minimal rights that constituted the basis for the development of civil society in Europe. Caste itself was seen as a form of colonial civil society in India, which provided an ironic, and inferior, anthropological analogue for the colonized world. In Europe, the rise of new nation-states in the eighteenth century went hand in hand with the construction of a new form of civil society. Civil society was to free individuals in new and progressive societies from traditional modes of social organization and from the myriad constraints of premodern and/or feudal polities. Civil society had been constituted by and institutionalized in a range of bodies—the church, educational institutions, civic organizations—that represented the interests of a private domain, interests construed to be autonomous from the state even as they were simultaneously protected by it. The modern state, more powerful than ever before, had legitimated itself in part through its claim to free the social realm from the politics of the past. In India, however, caste was understood always to have resisted political intrusion; it was already a kind of civil society in that it regulated and mediated the private domain, such as it was. But a society based on caste could not be more different from modern Western society, for caste was opposed to the basic premises of individualism, and it neither permitted the development of voluntarist or politically malleable social institutions nor worked to reinforce the modern state. Further, caste conferred citizenship only in social and ritual rather than in political contexts, and opposed the ideas of both individual action and social mobilization. According to some, caste actively resisted the modern state even more than it did the old, for the modern state opposed rather than supported the dharmic order of things. At the same time, many British officials were convinced that caste would stand in the way of nationalist mobilization, claiming as it did primordial loyalty from its members.

    Under colonialism, caste was thus made out to be far more—far more pervasive, far more totalizing, and far more uniform—than it had ever been before, at the same time that it was defined as a fundamentally religious social order. In fact, however, caste had always been political—it had been shaped in fundamental ways by political struggles and processes; even so, it was not a designation that exhausted the totality of Indian social forms, let alone described their essence. What we take now as caste is, in fact, the precipitate of a history that selected caste as the single and systematic category to name, and thereby contain, the Indian social order. In precolonial India, the units of social identity had been multiple, and their respective relations and trajectories were part of a complex, conjunctural, constantly changing, political world. The referents of social identity were not only heterogeneous; they were also determined by context. Temple communities, territorial groups, lineage segments, family units, royal retinues, warrior subcastes, little kingdoms, occupational reference groups, agricultural or trading associations, devotionally conceived networks and sectarian communities, even priestly cabals, were just some of the significant units of identification, all of them at various times far more significant than any uniform metonymy of endogamous caste groupings. Caste, or rather some of the things that seem most easily to come under the name of caste, was just one category among many others, one way of organizing and representing identity. Moreover, caste was not a single category or even a single logic of categorization, even for Brahmans, who were the primary beneficiaries of the caste idea. Regional, village, or residential communities, kinship groups, factional parties, chiefly contingents, political affiliations, and so on could both supersede caste as a rubric for identity and reconstitute the ways caste was organized. Within localities, or kingdoms, groups could rise or fall (and in the process become more or less castelike), depending on the fortunes of particular kings, chiefs, warriors, or headmen, even as kings could routinely readjust the social order by royal decree.²⁰

    Social identity was importantly political, as too were the contexts in which different units became formed, represented, and mobilized. And politics took on its shape and meaning in relation to local and regional systems of power in which headmen (of lineages, temples, villages), religious leaders (gurus, leaders of sects and monasteries, saints, priests, muftis, and imams), warriors, chiefs, and kings were figures of central importance, with authority over constituencies that from certain perspectives could look and act like caste groups. To read and organize social difference and deference—pervasive features of Indian society—solely in terms of caste thus required a striking act of history and studied disregard for ethnographic specificity, as well as a systematic denial of the political mechanisms that selected different kinds of social units as most significant, and as most highly valorized, at different times. Brahmanic texts, both Vedic origin stories for caste and the much later dharma texts of Manu, provided transregional and metahistorical modes of understanding Indian society that clearly appealed to British colonial interests and attitudes; they also secured for Indians pride of place in a civilizational lexicon of cultural reconstitution, reaffirmation, and resistance. The idea that varna—the classification of all castes into four hierarchical orders with the Brahman on top—could conceivably organize the social identities and relations of all Indians across the civilizational expanse of the subcontinent was only developed under the peculiar circumstances of British colonial rule. Hierarchy, in the sense of rank or ordered difference, might have been a pervasive feature of Indian history, but hierarchy in the sense used by Dumont and others became a systematic value only under the sign of the colonial modern.

    Caste and the Colonial Modern

    The transformations associated with modernity in India were overdetermined by the colonial situation. On the one hand, what was useful for British rule also became available for the uses of many Indians who were recruited to participate in one way or another in the construction of colonial knowledge. On the other hand, new forms of and claims about knowledge, products as they were in large part of early colonial Orientalism and late colonial state practices, could take root only because colonial interventions actively obliterated the political dynamic of colonial society. Ironically, it was the very permeability and dynamism of Indian society that allowed caste to become modern India’s apparition of its traditional being. Under colonial rule caste—now systematic, and systematically disembodied—lived on. In this new form it was appropriated and reconstructed by colonial power. What Orientalist knowledge did most successfully in the Indian context was to assert the precolonial authority of a specifically colonial form of power and representation.

    When caste became political again (if, necessarily, in a different sense), whether in response to census classifications at the beginning of the twentieth century or in reaction to the implementation of the Mandal Report at the end, no one should have been surprised. Caste had been political all along, but under colonialism was anchored to the service of a colonial interest in maintaining social order, justifying colonial power, and sustaining a very particular form of indirect rule. By indirect rule in this context I mean the mechanisms that were used both to buttress and to displace colonial authority. In the early years of colonial rule, these mechanisms were organized principally through land systems that were linked to modes of property, agrarian relations, and revenue collection. Zamindars, individual cultivators, and village communities were variably constituted—after long debates over Indian history and colonial policy—as the authentic heirs of precolonial local authority and as primary agents of revenue collection and local order. This was the period when Charles Cornwallis and Philip Francis took their cues from the physiocrats and argued in favor of the resurrection of local lords as a loyal and newly gentrified elite, indebted to British rule and dedicated to improvement; when Thomas Munro made his career by arguing against landlords both because he saw these survivals of older political systems as dangerous and because he was convinced they, unlike the ryots or cultivators whose role he championed, had no actual involvement in agricultural cultivation; and when Charles Metcalfe and Mountstuart Elphinstone established their reputations by identifying and advocating the resilience of the ancient village republic or community, writing histories to justify their position and drafting land policies to demonstrate the wisdom of their views.

    As agrarian revenue issues were provisionally resolved, they were at the same time increasingly taken over by other kinds of revenue concerns tied into the diversification of the colonial economy, ranging from changes in international trade, the success and transformation of industrial development in Britain, and the rise of major investments in railways and other infrastructures, to new kinds of world strategic concerns. Thus the crises of early conquest and rule began to give way to other issues of control. This was so particularly in the wake of the Great Rebellion of 1857, after which the Company’s ambitions of complete conquest were necessarily curtailed, and the

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