1st Edition

Indigeneity, Marginality and the State in Bangladesh Homeless at Home

By Nasir Uddin Copyright 2025
    210 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge India

    This book explores the critical linkages between indigeneity, marginality, and the state in Bangladesh. Indigeneity is progressively gaining currency in politics and thereby becoming an active force in the larger context of national activism with transnational patronage and international support. Drawing on comprehensive and solid ethnographic accounts, the book offers a broader understanding of the process of marginalisation and the emergence of new leadership among the Khumi, an indigenous group of Bangladesh. It illuminates how the Khumi have realised their position on the margin of the state within the socioeconomic, political, and ethnic history of the Chittagong Hill Tracts. It also looks at how kin-based social organisations and non-kin-based social relations become bases of power and authority as well as cooperation and reciprocity in Khumi society.

     

    Lucid and topical, the book will be of interest to scholars and researchers of indigenous studies, anthropology, social anthropology, sociology, political sciences, international relations, border studies, and South Asian studies, especially those concerned with Bangladesh.

    1. Introduction: A Triplicate Relation: Power, Marginality and Leadership in Khumi Life 2. Colonial Fantasy in Postcolonial Trajectories: The Emergence of Khumi and Their Indigenous Mobility Across History 3. The Local Installation of Global Indigeneity: Rights, Entitlements and Activism in Khumi Life 4. The Dynamics of Loosing and Recovering ‘Self’: Khumi Identity, Indigeneity, and Cultural Politics in Bangladesh 5. A Life Better than Before: Khumi Theory of ‘Development’ by Reshaping Social and Material Life 6. Local Dynamics of Politics: Social Relations, Power and Reciprocity in Khumi-World 7. Moving From the Margin: The Khumi Art of Resistance and Resilience 8. Conclusion: Indigeneity, Marginality and the State

    Biography

    Nasir Uddin, Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Chittagong, Bangladesh.