Symbolic Boundaries and Moral Demands of Dalit Student Activism

Q3 Social Sciences
Kristina Garalytė
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Emerging literature on Dalit student activism explores the ways Dalit students position themselves with regard to other student groups and the broader caste structure. However, less attention has been paid to intragroup relations and dynamics within the community of Scheduled Caste (SC) students. This article explores the emerging differentiation and boundary-making among the SC students, thus contributing to the ongoing discussion on differences and divisions within the larger Dalit community. Focusing on symbolic boundaries, morality and socio-political backgrounds, I discuss the actual conflict between two SC students, in which they debated the moral dictate of the Dalit movement of “paying back to society.” Though both students seem to have internalized the moral demand, their perspectives on how to implement it differed. One student I shall call Raju advocated that paying back should be done through political action; the other student, Devan, argued that artistic expression is an equally legitimate way to “pay back to society.” The two protagonists also had substantively different relations with regard to the Dalit student organizations that advocated for political activism and “paying back to society.” For Raju, Dalit political activism served as a main avenue for personal upward social mobility, while Devan viewed political activism as a restrictive imposition limiting other legitimate means for “paying back to society.” I argue that symbolic boundaries between students cannot be reduced to class or caste distinctions, but rather that they are based on differing ideological and moral alignments. While acknowledging the influence of Ambedkarite ideology in forming students’ moral views, this case study shows that SC students do not espouse a single ideology or moral stance regarding modes of political activism, which brings out tensions that arise at the intersection between Dalit movement’s ethics and multiple individual moralities. The paper also describes two different ways students may imagine their social mobility.
达利特学生激进主义的象征边界与道德诉求
关于达利特学生激进主义的新兴文献探讨了达利特学生相对于其他学生群体和更广泛的种姓结构的定位方式。然而,对在册种姓(SC)学生社区内的群体内关系和动态关注较少。本文探讨了SC学生之间正在出现的分化和边界划分,从而有助于对更大的达利特社区内的差异和分裂进行持续的讨论。围绕象征边界、道德和社会政治背景,我讨论了两名SC学生之间的实际冲突,在这场冲突中,他们就“回报社会”的达利特运动的道德要求进行了辩论。尽管两名学生似乎都内化了道德要求,但他们对如何实施道德要求的看法不同。我称之为拉朱的一名学生主张,应该通过政治行动来偿还;另一名学生德万(Devan)认为,艺术表达是“回报社会”的一种同样合法的方式。两位主角与倡导政治激进主义和“回馈社会”的达利特学生组织也有着本质上不同的关系。对拉朱来说,达利特政治激进术是个人向上社会流动的主要途径,而德万认为,政治激进主义是一种限制性的强加,限制了其他“回报社会”的合法手段。我认为,学生之间的象征性界限不能简化为阶级或种姓差异,而是基于不同的意识形态和道德取向。在承认Ambedkarite意识形态在形成学生道德观方面的影响的同时,本案例研究表明,SC学生在政治激进主义模式方面并不支持单一的意识形态或道德立场,这引发了达利特运动的伦理与多种个人道德之间的交叉点上出现的紧张关系。论文还描述了学生想象自己社会流动性的两种不同方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal
South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
审稿时长
32 weeks
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