Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgement
- Part I Introduction
- Part 2 Aspects of political stratification
- 3 Political arenas and the political class
- 4 Caste status and distribution
- 5 Land, labour, credit, and share capital
- 6 Descent groups and affinal networks
- Part 3 Political alliances
- Map of main Girvi settlement area
- Appendix
- Notes
- References
- Index
4 - Caste status and distribution
from Part 2 - Aspects of political stratification
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgement
- Part I Introduction
- Part 2 Aspects of political stratification
- 3 Political arenas and the political class
- 4 Caste status and distribution
- 5 Land, labour, credit, and share capital
- 6 Descent groups and affinal networks
- Part 3 Political alliances
- Map of main Girvi settlement area
- Appendix
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
As I noted in the previous chapter, much of the literature on political stratification in India centers on the notion of the ‘dominant caste’. According to Srinivas, the author of this concept,
A caste may be said to be ‘dominant’ when it preponderates numerically over the other castes, and when it also wields preponderant economic and political power. A large and powerful caste group can more easily be dominant if its position in the local caste hierarchy is not too low.
(1955:18)Mayer (1958a) observes that Srinivas's definition is concerned with aspects of dominance at the level of a single village, but that more inclusive levels of dominance also may be distinguished. Thus a caste is dominant in a region when it is dominant in a substantial majority of the villages of that region. A caste is dominant in the government of the district or state when it provides a substantial majority of the influential participants in institutions such as district councils, state cabinets, and so on. In some cases, as in Dewas Senior, there may be no regionally dominant caste. It is also possible for a caste to be dominant at a higher level of government without being dominant in the region. For example, in nineteenth-century Guntur District Deshastha (Maratha) Brahmins dominated the highest offices of district administration, while the British monopolized the Presidency administration, including Collectorships, but both groups were foreign to Madras and were without dominance at the village or regional levels (see Frykenberg 1965).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Elite Politics in Rural IndiaPolitical Stratification and Political Alliances in Western Maharashtra, pp. 49 - 58Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1974