Traditional vocations and modern professions among Tamil Brahmans in colonial and post-colonial south India

被引:5
|
作者
Fuller, C. J.
Narasimhan, Haripriya
机构
[1] Department of Anthropology, London School of Economics
来源
基金
英国经济与社会研究理事会;
关键词
South India-nineteenth and twentieth centuries; Tamil Brahmans; caste; education; employment; MIDDLE-CLASS;
D O I
10.1177/001946461004700403
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
Since the nineteenth century, Tamil Brahmans have been very well represented in the educated professions, especially law and administration, medicine, engineering and nowadays, information technology. This is partly a continuation of the Brahmans' role as literate service people, owing to their traditions of education, learning and literacy, but the range of professions shows that any direct continuity is more apparent than real. Genealogical data are particularly used as evidence about changing patterns of employment, education and migration. Caste traditionalism was not a determining constraint, for Tamil Brahmans were predominant in medicine and engineering as well as law and administration in the colonial period, even though medicine is ritually polluting and engineering resembles low-status artisans' work. Crucially though, as modern, English-language, credential-based professions that are well-paid and prestigious, law, medicine and engineering were and are all deemed eminently suitable for Tamil Brahmans, who typically regard their professional success as a sign of their caste superiority in the modern world. In reality, though, it is mainly a product of how their old social and cultural capital and their economic capital in land were transformed as they seized new educational and employment opportunities by flexibly deploying their traditional, inherited skills and advantages.
引用
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页码:473 / 496
页数:24
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