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Leprosy and a Life in South India

Journeys with a Tamil Brahmin

By (author) James Staples
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Lexington Books, Lanham, MD, United States
Published: 5th Jun 2014
Dimensions: w 152mm h 229mm d 16mm
Weight: 473g
ISBN-10: 0739187341
ISBN-13: 9780739187340
Barcode No: 9780739187340
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Synopsis
Drawing on solid ethnographic fieldwork as well as many hours of interviews, Leprosy and a Life in South India: Journeys with a Tamil Brahmin tells the life story of Das, a Tamil Brahmin born in the newly post-colonial India of the early 1950s. After being diagnosed with leprosy, Das spent over a decade on the streets of Bombay and Madras, learning to survive as an unofficial station porter, hotel bellhop, and sometimes tourist guide. He won and lost fortunes on horses, he gambled, and he learned firsthand of the pleasures to be had in Bombay's red light district. But for all the joy that comes through so vividly in his account, Das's story unfolds against a backdrop of everyday violence and hardship. Re-investigated through the prism of an individual life, what are often presented as the rigid social categories of caste, religion and kinship come to be seen in fresh new ways. Through this life history account, Leprosy in South India captures all this in ways conventional accounts do not, offering a unique take on what it is to be an Indian in contemporary India.

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James Staples's book takes us through a most exciting narrative journey. . . .[The book] dislodges any reductionist primacy ascribed to religion, caste, intimacy, or disease. * Journal Of The Royal Anthropological Institute * Staples's methodology . . . provides an interesting framework for organizing the individual anecdotes within the broader story of Das's lived experience. . . .Leprosy and a Life in South India is a recommended read for those interested in the life history genre, the ways in which cultural constructions of disease play out in real lives and depictions of the human condition in South Asia. * American Ethnologist * Leprosy and a Life (not leprosy and life) is a thrilling book, written almost like a novel, in the first person with a hero and several other characters and a number of plots and subplots. The book differs from a novel, or for that matter from any literary work, because Staples makes no attempt to create an illusory or a magical effect through fictions in the mind of the reader.... These thickly described chapters form the core of the book, which is the painstaking result of anthropological fieldwork by the author over three decades in India. The method adopted by the author toward the construction of his self-reflective ethnography is life history, which in recent years has emerged as a potentially rich technique with immense future possibilities.... Putting a research assistant in the foreground of a multisited ethnographic narrative and using his lens to view postcolonial India are definitely novel. Staples has opened new windows not only for anthropology but also for social science research in South Asia in general, wherein big themes like globalization, marginality, and the subaltern consciousness still predominate.... I believe that this book will help bridge the proverbial gap between the self and the other, the observer and the observed, and the objective and the subjective in ethnographic representations of the changing nature of caste in India. * American Anthropologist * The engaging biographical narrative Leprosy and a Life in South India stems from anthropologist James Staples's 30-year friendship with his key informant, G. Mohandas Iyer, known as Das. The richness of this book lies in the chosen genre of life history, which marks a shift from Staples's previous work on low-caste people with leprosy in India.... Staples convincingly positions the book and its genre in relation to debates about authorship, the politics of representation and power, and styles of ethnographic writing. Leprosy and a Life in South India is a refreshing contribution to ethnographic research in South India, as well as to debates on methodology, ethnographic genre and insider-outsider ethical issues. * South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies * Leprosy and a Life in South India is a vividly told and skillfully presented anthropological life history, bringing poignant texture to the lived experience of disease, caste, poverty, migration, conversion, and more in contemporary South India. -- Kirin Narayan, Australian National University, author of "Alive in the Writing" This is a rich, thickly textured and deeply intimate meditation on the story of a remarkable man who seems to embody the triumphs and tragedies of life in the margins of modern India. The author has found that point of fine balance between deep empathy and critical understanding, just as Das himself seems to be able to articulate the story of his own life in terms that capture the inherent tension between intimacy and objective dispassion. Fundamentally, this is a beautifully written story about the precarity of human existence. -- Joseph S. Alter, University of Pittsburgh