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Cultivating distress: cotton, caste and farmer suicides in India
- Source :
- Anthropology & Medicine, article-version (VoR) Version of Record
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Nearly 4,00,000 farmers committed suicide in India between 1995 and 2018. This translates into approximately 48 suicides every day. The majority of suicides were those from ‘backwarded’ castes including Dalit farmers. This ethnographic study on cotton farmer suicide reports narratives of surviving Dalit families. The results reveal that financial and moral debt when accrued within a web of family and caste-related relationships result in patterns of personal and familial humiliation, producing a profound sense of hopelessness in the Self. This loss of hope and pervasive humiliation is ‘cultivated’ by a cascade of decisions taken by others with little or no responsibility to the farmers and the land they hope to cultivate as they follow different cultural and financial logic. Suicide resolves the farmers’ humiliation and is a logical conclusion to the farmer’s distress, which results from a reconfiguration of agricultural spaces into socially toxic places, in turn framing a local panopticon. The current corona virus pandemic is likely to impact adversely on peoples who are culturally distanced.
- Subjects :
- Suicide Prevention
media_common.quotation_subject
caste, distress
India
cotton
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
immune system diseases
Debt
Panopticon
Humans
Narrative
Sociology
Socioeconomics
media_common
Farmers
Self
Anthropology, Medical
Caste
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Humiliation
food and beverages
clinical anthropology
General Medicine
Original Papers
respiratory tract diseases
Distress
Framing (social sciences)
Social Class
Anthropology
panlexicon
Farmer suicides
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14692910
- Volume :
- 28
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Anthropologymedicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7a696ebeb37a465eaec98f4c9e845985