Caste and capitalism in colonial India : the Nattukottai Chettiars /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Rudner, David West
Imprint:Berkeley : University of California Press, 1994.
Description:p. cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/1571155
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0520072367 (alk. paper)
0520083504 (alk. paper)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Table of Contents:
  • 1. Introduction. The Nakarattars of Tamil Nadu. Historical Overview. Being a Nakarattar in Colonial India. Nakarattar Studies. Nakarattars and the Anthropological Study of Caste. Outline of the Book
  • Pt. 1. Concepts. 2. Conceiving Caste. Capitalism and Caste. The Standard View of Caste. Caste as Symbolic Capital in Political Ethnicization. "Where's the Rest of Me?" The Case of the Komatis. Segmentary Structure and Structural Variation. The "Corporacy" of Castes: Kayasths and Nakarattars Compared. Ecologically Qualified Views of Caste. Mercantile Caste Variation: Some South Indian Dimensions. A Closer Look at Merchant-Artisans: The Case of the Kaikkolars. The Merchant-Banker Nakarattars Contrasted. Symbolic Capital and the Cultural Ecology of Caste. 3. The Study of Commerce in Indian Society. Giants on Our Shoulders. Three Stereotypes of the Indian Moneylender. Legal Stereotypes and Historical Myopia. Village Studies of Indian Commerce. Beyond the Village Moneylender. Indian Burghers and Portfolio Capitalists. The Historiographic Gap. The Historiographic Rejection of Caste in Commerce
  • Pt. 2. Business. 4. The Colonial Expansion. Overview. Seventeenth-Century South India. Cotton, Pearls, Rice, and Salt, 1800-1850. Peshkash, Money Lending, and Repayment, 1800-1850. Litigation and the Emergence of Nakarattar Zamindars, 1850-1900. Nakarattar Commercial Expansion in Southeast Asia, 1870-1930. Ceylon, 1870-1930. Burma, 1870-1930. Malaya in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. A Final Comment on Nakarattar Commercial Expansion. 5. Banker's Trust and the Culture of Banking. Banker's Trust? Nakarattar Interest Rates and Deposit Banking. Hundi Transactions and Other Transfers of Credit between Nakarattars. Accounting. Proprietor's Capital and Deposit Capital from Other Nakarattars. 6. A Collectivist Spirit of Capitalism. Two Spirits of Capitalism. Three Models of Nakarattar Banking Organization. Families and Firms. Pulli and Valavu (The Conjugal Family and the Joint Family). Proprietors and Agents. The Nakarattar Agency. Adathis: The Nakarattar Elite. Nakaravitutis. Nakarattar Panchayats. Collectivism and Capitalism
  • Pt. 3. Ritual and Kinship. 7. The Magic of Capitalism and the Mercantile Elite. Magical Capitalism. Nakarattar Worship and Trade in Seventeenth-Century Palani. Temples as Political Institutions in the Seventeenth Century. Purity, Protection, Trust, and Mercantile Elites. Worship and Commerce. The Emergence of Provincial Politics. The Creation of "the Public" and the Question of Privilege. The Case of Raja Sir Muthia and the Politics of Madras, 1928-1969. Junctures and Disjunctures in the Culture of Elite Endowment. Economic Power, Elite Endowment, and Political Authority. The Historical Continuity of South Indian Mercantile Elites. 8. Marriage Alliance. Preliminary Definitions: Terms for Kin Groups. Marriage Alliance, Affinal Kindreds, and Tayatis. Vattakais and Territorial Endogamy. Affinal Gifts as Interest-Earning Trusts: An Illustration. The Ritual Construction of Nakarattar Marriage Alliances. Cir. Moi. Murai. Vevu. Summary of Affinal Prestations. Positive Marriage Rules and Virtual Affinity. In-Laws, Murai, and Terminological Marking. The Maternal Uncle, the Wife's Father, and Murai. A Note on Ethnographic Reports of Nakarattar Marriage Rules. Final Comment. 9. Temple Control and Cross-Cut Segmentation in Chettinad. Nakarattar Settlement and Dominance in Chettinad: The Historical Charter. Religious Endowment. Descent and the Temple Cults of Chettinad. Clan Temples and Temple-Clans. Village Temples and Dominant Lineage Segments. 10. Conclusion: Social Structure as Social Investment. Competing for the Past, Investing in the Future. Marriage and Minimization. Merchant and Peasant: Nakarattar and Goundar Political Structure. Hierarchy, Territorial Precedence, and Royal Honors: The Pudukottai Kallars. A Mythic Charter for Nakarattar Values. Ambidexterity in the Nakarattar Varalaru. Cross-Cut Segmentation and Equality. Equality and Elitehood. The Symbolism of Finance. Macro-, Micro-, and Mediate Analysis. Appendix A. Interest Rate Tables
  • Appendix B. Sample Hundis
  • Appendix C. Career of Raja Sir Muthia Chettiar
  • Appendix D. Nakarattar Kinship Terms.