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Of nomadology: A requiem for India(n-ness).

Authors :
Ray, Avishek
Source :
Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture; Oct2019, Vol. 10 Issue 2, p281-292, 12p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Despite the statist imagination of the 'nomad' pitted against an overtly instrumental understanding of space, 'modern' techniques of statist demographic control, and increasing surveillance on mobility, the trope of nomadology in the context of India often characterizes 'the return of the repressed'. The Buddhists in the Ancient, the Bhakti–Sufi practitioners in the Medieval, and certain anti-imperialist ideologues in the Modern have perpetually latched on to the trope to articulate political dissidence. Thinking in these terms, the invocation of nomadology in Critical Theory – by Deleuze and Guattari, Rosi Braidotti, Michel de Certeau and Edward Said, among others – alluding to non-conformity, non-linearity and political subversion, has an intellectual history that is often purportedly grounded onto 'India'. My article will explore how the dichotomy between the 'good' wanderer and the 'bad' wanderer in the 'Indian tradition' was premised upon a highly contingent process of religio-political partisanship and struggles over territorialization. Using the nineteenth-century Orientalist discourse on the Romani community and the Beats' obsession with 'India' (cf. the Beat Movement) as case studies, this article, from the postcolonial vantage point, demonstrates how the impulse to assume nomadology as characteristic of 'India(n-ness)' – to have perpetually existed in the 'Indian' cultural repertoire – is symbolic of an ahistorical and essentialist notion of 'India'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20404344
Volume :
10
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148800610
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1386/cjmc_00007_1