Publication:
Governance and Marginality: Politics of Belonging, Citizenship, and Claim-­Making in the Muslim Neighborhoods of Mumbai

Thumbnail Image

Date

2013-03-14

Published Version

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Dhaka-Kintgen, Ujala. 2012. Governance and Marginality: Politics of Belonging, Citizenship, and Claim-­Making in the Muslim Neighborhoods of Mumbai. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.

Research Data

Abstract

This dissertation analyzes how governance and community-based politics of claims in marginalized Muslim neighborhoods of Mumbai are continually reconfigured in relation to one another. By tracing this relationship, I problematize conceptualizations of governmental forms and community that don't adequately attend to their co-constitution in practice. More specifically, I examine the intersections between state practices and claims of belonging in Mumbai neighborhoods inhabited by Muslims who, impelled by regional economic inequalities, immigrated to the city from North India and other parts of the country. A large number of them traditionally belong to artisanal communities and are today engaged in the informal sector of the economy. I am interested in understanding how competing and converging claims are made to locality, urban space, labor, and caste in the interactions between these working-class Muslim communities and the state in a city that has become highly segregated along religious and regional lines. I argue that state and marginalized community in minoritized areas are not defined by independence and isolation, but by a relationship of co-generation marked by convergence and contradiction. My analysis of the interactions between community forms and state practices explores modes of laying claim to localizing forms of belonging with respect to urban space, public religiosity, histories of labor, kinship, and 'backward' caste politics.

Description

Other Available Sources

Keywords

Cultural anthropology, South Asian studies, Citizenship, Governmentality, Islam, Minority Identities, Political Anthropology, South Asia

Terms of Use

Metadata Only

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories