Adab and Banarsipan
Embodying Community among Muslim Artisans in Varanasi, India
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1558/cist.v1i2.839Keywords:
Banaras, marginal Muslim communities, Muslims in IndiaAbstract
In this article, I consider adab (“cultured respectfulness”) and banarsipan (“Banaras-ness”) as two ways-of-being for working-class Muslims in the Indian city of Varanasi. Each of these identities contain its own ontology and truths about the remembered past, the lived present, and the processes which created them, and thus serves as alternatives to nationalist and communal identities and the histories they present. These ways-of-being are examined using a theoretical orientation that brings together concepts of bodily hexis and social memory, which offers a promising way to consider local or marginal Muslim communities, their emic configurations of meaning, power, status and personhood, and their relationship with dominant or normative Muslim groups and identities.References
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