{"title":"M. K. Gandhi, N. K. Bose, and Bengali Village Society","authors":"R. W. Nicholas","doi":"10.1177/2277436X19877308","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract N. K. Bose, a close disciple of Gandhi, was the author’s Indian mentor in anthropology and with respect to Gandhi’s social thought as well. Gandhi visualised a village society integrated by mutual interdependence but freed from the inequality of caste. The author’s fieldwork in West Bengal villages found two opposed ritual postures that were struck during the two most important community rituals of the year, that is, Gajan in the spring and Durga Puja in the autumn. During Gajan, the ordinary people became temporary ascetics (sannyasi) and gave up distinctions of caste and rank among themselves, like the disciples of Gandhi, who were expected to free themselves of such differences. During Durga Puja, the traditional caste occupations of the dependents of the former zamindars were mobilised to play differentiated roles in the ritual even when those occupations no longer provided their livelihoods; the jajmani system still prevailed during the puja. Gandhi’s social theory aspired to elements of both ritual postures: the radical equality and ‘communitas’ of the Gajan ascetics, and the mutual contributions to the community of occupationally specialised castes, which, however, have not escaped inequality.","PeriodicalId":198822,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the Anthropological Survey of India","volume":"18 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-11-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of the Anthropological Survey of India","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/2277436X19877308","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract N. K. Bose, a close disciple of Gandhi, was the author’s Indian mentor in anthropology and with respect to Gandhi’s social thought as well. Gandhi visualised a village society integrated by mutual interdependence but freed from the inequality of caste. The author’s fieldwork in West Bengal villages found two opposed ritual postures that were struck during the two most important community rituals of the year, that is, Gajan in the spring and Durga Puja in the autumn. During Gajan, the ordinary people became temporary ascetics (sannyasi) and gave up distinctions of caste and rank among themselves, like the disciples of Gandhi, who were expected to free themselves of such differences. During Durga Puja, the traditional caste occupations of the dependents of the former zamindars were mobilised to play differentiated roles in the ritual even when those occupations no longer provided their livelihoods; the jajmani system still prevailed during the puja. Gandhi’s social theory aspired to elements of both ritual postures: the radical equality and ‘communitas’ of the Gajan ascetics, and the mutual contributions to the community of occupationally specialised castes, which, however, have not escaped inequality.
博斯(N. K. Bose)是甘地的亲密弟子,是笔者在人类学和甘地社会思想方面的印度导师。甘地设想了一个相互依存的村庄社会,但摆脱了种姓的不平等。作者在西孟加拉邦村庄的田野调查发现,在一年中两个最重要的社区仪式期间,即春季的Gajan和秋季的Durga Puja,人们会采取两种相反的仪式姿势。在Gajan期间,普通人成为暂时的苦行僧(sannyasi),放弃了他们之间的种姓和等级的区别,就像甘地的门徒一样,他们被期望从这些差异中解脱出来。在杜尔加普贾节期间,前扎门达尔家属的传统种姓职业被动员起来,在仪式中扮演不同的角色,即使这些职业不再为他们提供生计;在法会期间,jajmani系统仍然盛行。甘地的社会理论渴望两种仪式姿态的元素:Gajan苦行僧的激进平等和“社区”,以及对职业专业化种姓社区的共同贡献,然而,这并没有逃脱不平等。