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Social Science and Public Policy

From Non-Brahmin Self-Respect to Dravidian Self-Rule

October 24, 2023 at 3:30pm5:00pm

Eggers Hall, 341

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From
Non-Brahmin Self-Respect to Dravidian Self-Rule: Anti-Caste Internationalism,
Anti-Colonial Nationalism,
and the Complexity of Interwar Figures 

The
Moynihan Institute’s South Asia Center presents a talk by Matthew Baxter of
Syracuse University. 

The
rising centrality of “comparison” in the opening decades of 21st-c
entury political theory invites attention to how local articulations of power
rely on distant relationships—whether concrete or imagined.  This presentation
focuses on the rising salience of the Continental Jew during the 1930s and its
subsequent appropriations on the Indian Subcontinent by elements associated
with the radical social reformer EV Ramasami (EVR, 1879-1973). 

I argue that
the Jew’s riven image in Western Europe—“logically contradictory but
psychologically consistent…appear[ing] both as…victim of persecution and
persecutor” (Lowenthal & Guterman, 1949)—became bound to dramatic shifts in
EVR’s challenge to caste-based injustice in South India.  

Matthew H. Baxter (Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley) is the regional programs manager, Asia, at the Moynihan Institute and assistant professor by courtesy appointment, political science, at the Maxwell School, Syracuse
University.  He previously served on the political science faculty at Ashoka
University, was a visiting scholar at Cornell University’s South Asia Program,
held postdoctoral positions at Harvard University and Rutgers University, and
worked as the associate editor for South Asia at
Asian Survey.  

This event was first published on October 10, 2023 and last updated on October 13, 2023.


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