Pir-Panjals, the Himalayan ranges in Jammu and Kashmir, are home to various communities known for their distinctiveness, heterogeneity and diversity. Such diversity is historically embedded in the fluidity embodied by folds of Panjals. These folds encapsulated social, cultural, and religious plurality within the principalities that thrived here. The Partition of 1947 profoundly altered this by carving lines of demarcationpresent day line-of-controlinto the landscape. These lines have territorially, religiously and culturally divided ethnicities, including the Paharis of Poonch, known for multi-religious and linguistic cohesion. This book examines Partitions impact on these pockets of diversity by exploring how Partitions borders continue to shape social, symbolic and religious boundaries and how these boundaries impact shared plurality here. The work emphasizes the need to identify and archive sources of plurality so that their cultivation and practice continue to counter the binaries that essentially homogenize life-ways into categories of us versus them. 1. It studies partition in new light, in religious non-binaries 2. It makes a call to open up the category of ethnicity in the Indian context, which has till now remained restricted to the north-eastern part of the country 3. It studies Jammu and Kashmir through alternative narratives of identities least included in a dominant discourse on Kashmir
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1: Partitioned Ethnicities and Emergent Borderlands: The Rola of
Santaali
Chapter 2: Ethnic Plurality, Religious Assertion and the Everyday: The Past
Through the Present
Chapter 3: Cultural Religious Plurality and the Sikh Faith
Chapter 4: Caste, Marginality and the Dalit-Religion
Conclusion
Annexure
Index
Malvika Sharma is currently a Nehru-Fulbright Post-Doctoral Visiting Research Fellow at Department of Religion, Wesleyan University, Connecticut, U.S. She has previously worked at Institute for Economic Growth, New Delhi. She has a doctorate in Sociology from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Her research work has appeared in key journals such as H.A.U. the Journal of Ethnographic Theory, Social Identities: Journal for the Study of Race, Nation, and Culture, Asian Ethnicity, Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, among others.