This issue of Outlook looks at the politics of appropriation and resistance in the wake of recent developments in states like Jharkhand and in the UT of Ladakh.
Outlook Magazine - 01 March 2024
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COVER STORY
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Adivasis have their own customary traditions and enshrined constitutional rights. Yet attempts are being made to not only take away their guaranteed privileges, but also to bring them into the Hindu fold
Former chief minister of Jharkhand, Champai Soren, says that the Union Government has been suppressing Adivasi voices and leadership
After the abrogation of Article 370, Ladakhi leaders hoped the government would act to protect their tribal identity
A network of Hindutva organisations has developed close relations with tribal socio-cultural groups in Northeastern states, with an agenda to portray indigenous faith as part of Sanatan Dharma, or Hinduism
A lot of effort is on in India and the world to identify the values that form the lifeforce of the tribals and to snuff them out
Nine months of violence have left the once syncretic Manipuri society divided between tribalism, ethnic revivalism and religious majoritarianism
While governments at the state and centre make tall claims of being pro-Adivasi, tribals in the Andhra-Telangana region continue to lose their homelands and their grip over their rights
Irrespective of the quality of education received in cities or in the tribal hinterland, Adivasis must arise and claim the promises of equality, justice, liberty and fraternity encoded in the Constitution to count as citizens rather than samples
The Last Island endeavours to navigate the extensive history of the Andaman islanders. However, it lacks rigour
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Adivasis have their own customary traditions and enshrined constitutional rights. Yet attempts are being made to not only take away their guaranteed privileges, but also to bring them into the Hindu fold
-
Former chief minister of Jharkhand, Champai Soren, says that the Union Government has been suppressing Adivasi voices and leadership
-
After the abrogation of Article 370, Ladakhi leaders hoped the government would act to protect their tribal identity
-
A network of Hindutva organisations has developed close relations with tribal socio-cultural groups in Northeastern states, with an agenda to portray indigenous faith as part of Sanatan Dharma, or Hinduism
-
A lot of effort is on in India and the world to identify the values that form the lifeforce of the tribals and to snuff them out
-
Nine months of violence have left the once syncretic Manipuri society divided between tribalism, ethnic revivalism and religious majoritarianism
-
While governments at the state and centre make tall claims of being pro-Adivasi, tribals in the Andhra-Telangana region continue to lose their homelands and their grip over their rights
-
Irrespective of the quality of education received in cities or in the tribal hinterland, Adivasis must arise and claim the promises of equality, justice, liberty and fraternity encoded in the Constitution to count as citizens rather than samples
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The Last Island endeavours to navigate the extensive history of the Andaman islanders. However, it lacks rigour
OTHER STORIES
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Publication of donor details following the Supreme Court order striking down electoral bonds may embarrass both the BJP as well as some regional parties
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Farmers’ demand for MSP for all crops, among other assurances, remain unfulfilled
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Will the quotidian Ram in our mind and body be replaced by the victorious powerful Ram outside in an inert stone house?
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Clothing is inseparably linked to tribal identity. Each tribe has a unique design language. Every embellishment, weave, and motif has a special meaning to the community
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The Events In 'Prophet Song' Are Happening Somewhere In The World Right Now: Irish Writer Paul Lynch
Paul Lynch's 'Prophet Song', which won the Booker Prize 2023, does much more than just speculate about an incumbent future
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Author Brahma Prakash turns the Covid-19 pandemic and its consequences into a powerful metaphor to examine the human condition of contemporary India
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Patna-based Sonu, nicknamed Merio Rapper, entertains his customers by performing raps on themes like poverty, unemployment and inflation
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First, our ancestors were termed uncivilised, savage, etc. Then, we were called illiterate, uncultured, backward, etc. The Britishers tried to ‘civilise’ us.