Abstract

AbstractMany minoritised and marginalised populations, including young people, are debating what constitutes a ‘survivable life’ and, in turn, how life can be arranged so that it is more than just survival. Notwithstanding these trends, however, there is little scholarly work on local discourses and practices of life and viability. This paper addresses this gap by examining the spatial and temporal process through which young people imagine and build viable lives in an area of the Indian Himalayas. We highlight the importance for these young people of building life as ‘jeevan’, an idea particularly associated with survival. We also highlight the significance they attach to protecting a wider, ‘puri life’ (‘whole life’), a process that affords opportunities for enjoyment and ethical fulfilment beyond survival. This account of life thought ‘on the ground’ provides a basis for reflecting on Agamben's (Homo sacer: Sovereign power and bare life. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press; 1998) arguments about the prevalence of ‘bare life’ in the contemporary world.

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