Decoding Subaltern Politics

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A01=James C. Scott
agrarian
agrarian sociology
Alor Setar
Author_James C. Scott
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cadastral
Cadastral Survey
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comparative peasant studies
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Durham Road
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
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everyday resistance
Face To Face
great
Great Tradition
Great Tradition Religion
legal identity systems
Luther Standing Bear
micro-politics of rural resistance
millennarian
Millennarian Movements
movements
Muda Agricultural Development Authority
Naming Practices
peasant
Peasant Resistance
religion
revolt
rural governance
Rural Political Activity
state formation processes
Subaltern Politics
Subsistence Ethic
survey
Synoptic Legibility
Tithe Collector
Tithe Owners
tradition
University Of Wisconsin
Violates
Young Man
Zakat System

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415539753
  • Weight: 490g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Oct 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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James C. Scott has researched and written on subaltern groups, and, in particular, peasants, rebellion, resistance, and agriculture, for over 35 years. Yet much of Scott’s most interesting work on the peasantry and the state, both conceptually and empirically, has never been published in book form. For the first time Decoding Subaltern Politics: Ideology, Disguise, and Resistance in Agrarian Politics, brings together some of his most important work in one volume.

The book covers three distinct yet interlinked bodies of work. The first lays out a framework for understanding peasant politics and rebellion, much of which is applicable to rural areas of the contemporary global south. Scott then goes on to develop his arguments regarding everyday forms of peasant resistance using the comparative example of the religious tithe in France and Malaysia, and tracing the forms of resistance that cover their own tracks and avoid direct clashes with authorities. For much of the world’s population, and for most of its history, this sort of politics was far more common than the violent clashes that dominate the history books, and in this book one can examine the anatomy of such resistance in rich comparative detail. Finally, Scott explores how the state’s increasing grip on its population: its identity, land-holding, income, and movements, is a precondition for political hegemony. Crucially, in examining the invention of state-mandated legal identities, especially, the permanent patronym and the vagaries of its imposition on vernacular life, Scott lays bare the micro-processes of state-formation and resistance.

Written by one of the leading social theorists of our age, Decoding Subaltern Politics: Ideology, Disguise, and Resistance in Agrarian Politics is an indispensible guide to the study of subaltern culture and politics and is essential reading for political scientists, anthropologists, sociologists and historians alike.

James C. Scott is the Sterling Professor of Political Science and Professor of Anthropology, and is Director of the Agrarian Studies Program at Yale University, USA.

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