Power, Performance, and the Limits of Contemporary Animism as a (De)colonial Perspective for Indian Caste Society 

“Contemporary animism” or what is often termed as “new animism” has emerged as one of the most powerful perspectives to understand and decolonize the indigenous cultural practices and knowledge systems in recent years. Brahmanical Hinduism (or neo-Brahmanism) is considered as a cultural-religious p...

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Main Author: Brahma Prakash
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brandeis University Library 2024-11-01
Series:Caste
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Online Access:https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/1764
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author Brahma Prakash
author_facet Brahma Prakash
author_sort Brahma Prakash
collection DOAJ
description “Contemporary animism” or what is often termed as “new animism” has emerged as one of the most powerful perspectives to understand and decolonize the indigenous cultural practices and knowledge systems in recent years. Brahmanical Hinduism (or neo-Brahmanism) is considered as a cultural-religious practice that still carries undercurrents of animism in India.2 Animist beliefs have remained strongly embedded in Brahminical religious and cultural practices, such as belief in the existence of soul, persona and so on. This article argues that the ethos of neo-Brahmanism is not only antithetical to the perspectivism of contemporary animism, it rather offers a model that can be termed as ‘inverted animism’ or the cultural practices that tend to colonize the radical potentials of animism. Such Hinduism as hegemonic cultural practices disrobe the environment from its personhood, even fetishizes the person, and turns them into objects. It is an ‘animism’ that goes against its own spirit by colonizing the personality of the object, materials and other entities.
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spelling doaj-art-ed29b1ddaac347f0824ebffa5a333a9c2024-11-20T14:43:45ZengBrandeis University LibraryCaste2639-49282024-11-015310.26812/caste.v5i3.1764Power, Performance, and the Limits of Contemporary Animism as a (De)colonial Perspective for Indian Caste Society Brahma Prakash0Assistant Professor, Theatre and Performance Studies, School of Arts and Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India “Contemporary animism” or what is often termed as “new animism” has emerged as one of the most powerful perspectives to understand and decolonize the indigenous cultural practices and knowledge systems in recent years. Brahmanical Hinduism (or neo-Brahmanism) is considered as a cultural-religious practice that still carries undercurrents of animism in India.2 Animist beliefs have remained strongly embedded in Brahminical religious and cultural practices, such as belief in the existence of soul, persona and so on. This article argues that the ethos of neo-Brahmanism is not only antithetical to the perspectivism of contemporary animism, it rather offers a model that can be termed as ‘inverted animism’ or the cultural practices that tend to colonize the radical potentials of animism. Such Hinduism as hegemonic cultural practices disrobe the environment from its personhood, even fetishizes the person, and turns them into objects. It is an ‘animism’ that goes against its own spirit by colonizing the personality of the object, materials and other entities. https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/1764New animism, decolonization, Brahminism, caste society, perspectivism, Adivasis
spellingShingle Brahma Prakash
Power, Performance, and the Limits of Contemporary Animism as a (De)colonial Perspective for Indian Caste Society 
Caste
New animism, decolonization, Brahminism, caste society, perspectivism, Adivasis
title Power, Performance, and the Limits of Contemporary Animism as a (De)colonial Perspective for Indian Caste Society 
title_full Power, Performance, and the Limits of Contemporary Animism as a (De)colonial Perspective for Indian Caste Society 
title_fullStr Power, Performance, and the Limits of Contemporary Animism as a (De)colonial Perspective for Indian Caste Society 
title_full_unstemmed Power, Performance, and the Limits of Contemporary Animism as a (De)colonial Perspective for Indian Caste Society 
title_short Power, Performance, and the Limits of Contemporary Animism as a (De)colonial Perspective for Indian Caste Society 
title_sort power performance and the limits of contemporary animism as a de colonial perspective for indian caste society
topic New animism, decolonization, Brahminism, caste society, perspectivism, Adivasis
url https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/1764
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