Abstract

This essay explores the relationship between caste, gender and knowledge production through an engagement with the creative, political and theoretical writings of Dalits (ex-untouchable castes) in modern India. Collectively the texts explicate how caste hierarchies, intersecting with other forms of socially constructed difference such as gender and class, are reproduced through spatial practices that regulate the presence, movement and interactions of bodies. My analysis focuses on the ways in which these textual projects interrogate caste-gender discrimination across local, institutional and national-symbolic spaces, thus demonstrating their connectivity within a broader geography. As such, they disrupt dominant discourses of state and nation in which caste is confined to exceptional or innocuous spaces, in order to claim its diminishing significance in post-colonial India. Such forms of containment are reproduced in feminist research when caste is framed as a local, ‘internal hierarchy’ and in turn, of limited relevance to transnational analyses. As the archive interrogates and reworks the category of caste, it provides an analytics to interrogate caste privilege across multiple contexts. I draw on these analytics to consider how my access to and reading of an archive of Dalit politics is shaped by caste-class privilege and diasporic location.

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