Abstract

This article develops a critical analysis of the colonial world of the postcolonial historians whose works inadvertently contribute to the process of reconstituting the colonial construction of tribal identities in neoliberal India. The monolithic and colonial construction of tribal identities in postcolonial India reinforces and preserves tribal identities along the lines of the colonial methods of identity formation based on territorialization. The article highlights the problematic features of the territorialization and deterritorialization of tribal identities and their reconstitution. Territorial-based identity formation is now being used and sustained by the neoliberal political and economic ruling and non-ruling elites in order to exploit tribal communities. The existence of upper-caste and class-based Hindu social order is concomitant with a social hierarchy based on the exploitation of tribal communities in India. This article locates the colonial and neoliberal capitalist logic of identity formation that serves elites, and helps to advance the neoliberal political-economic project of the Hindu right. A postmodern logic of identity formation facilitates the expansion of the neoliberal capitalist economy with the process of Hinduization. It contributes to identity formations that divide the people on territorial grounds. The article is divided into four parts. The first outlines the philosophical basis of identity formation and its links with neoliberalism; the second deals with identity formation based on territory; part three documents the debates on tribal identity formation in postcolonial India; and the final part elucidates the capitalist logic inherent in territorial-based identity formations.

Highlights

  • Much has been written on questions of ‘identity’ and processes of identity formation

  • These works require a critical interrogation of their conceptualization of tribal identity, which is based on a territoriality that carries a colonial legacy that serves contemporary global capitalist interests, as well as the interests of the Indian political, social, economic and cultural elites

  • Construction of tribal identities based on territory is reductionist in its approach, and negates the very idea of ‘identity’ itself

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Summary

Introduction

Much has been written on questions of ‘identity’ and processes of identity formation. The permeation of the capitalist logics in identity formation can be found in the works of Dalton (1872) and Damodaran (2006a, 2006b).3 These works require a critical interrogation of their conceptualization of tribal identity, which is based on a territoriality that carries a colonial legacy that serves contemporary global capitalist interests, as well as the interests of the Indian political, social, economic and cultural elites.

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