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The Jajmani System in North India: An Examination of its Logic and Status across Two Centuries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Simon Commander
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge

Extract

As the universality of political economy has receded before the myriad instances of particular economic rationalities, it has become increasingly clear that most non-capitalist structures are organized around a multi-centric set of dynamics. In this regard one would expect to find that the economic as a category possesses less univocal clarity and its precise sense is only vouchsafed through a cognisance of the broader, integrating set of validating principles. This would be true as much in Mauss's analysis of the Gift as it would be in relation to the dynamics of a feudal economy. In the first instance the transactional medium and symbolic sense of the act contains within it the premises of an entire system, while in the second example the implied free-play of economic indices rests, in reality, on the intervention of extra-economic factors, in this case, the intervention of the seigneury. From the case of one transactional exchange to the dynamics of an entire system, common to both is the reallocation of the category ‘economic’ and its merger with criteria and principles of a wider and more diffuse nature.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1983

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References

The research for this paper has been funded by the Leverhulme Trust.

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62 In Punjab this system of redistribution was sometimes termed ‘sepidari’. See Gazetteer of Lahore District, 1883/4 (Lahore, 1885), pp. 78–9.Google Scholar

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68 See Commander, ‘Agrarian Economy of Northern India’, Chs 2 and 3.

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76 Ibbetson, D., Report (1883), pp. 115–16.Google Scholar Begar was later, post-1920, to become an important political issue in this area with the Congress using this as a plank in their campaign against the Unionist Party. On this subject, see Prem Chowdhury, The Role of Sir Chhotu Ram in Punjab Politics (J. Nehru University Ph.D, 1979), pp. 75ff.

77 A point made more generally by Orenstein, H., ‘Exploitation and Function in the Interpretation of Jajmani’, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, 18, No. 4, pp. 303 ff.Google Scholar

78 W. C. Benett, Report on Gonda District, 1878, UPSA Lucknow, Board of Revenue, Gonda, File 47.

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103 Commander, ‘Agrarian Economy of Northern India’, Chs 4 and 5, for a more detailed treatment of this aspect. A single district-level study in relation to one crop (sugar-cane) also has some useful information on this subject, Amin, S., ‘Sugarcane Cultivation in Gorakhpur, U.P., c. 1890–1940: A study in the Interrelation between Capitalistic Enterprise and a Dependent Peasantry’ (Oxford D.Phil., 1978).Google Scholar

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105 This is the sense in which Bayly employs the term when arguing that the redistributive element integral to the indigenous State forms distinguishes them from the extractive and one-sided nature of the colonial State. However, the fact that these States may have had a more organic and ‘stranded’ relationship with their subjects does not justify the use of the termjajmani. Furthermore, jajmani seems on close examination to lack the quality of a system even at a micro-level. However, its sphere of operation and the sense of the structure was undoubtedly one of a micro nature. C. A. Bayly, ‘Towns and Traders in Northern India, c. 1720–1850’ (forthcoming).

106 Martinez-Alier, Juan, Haciendas, Plantations and Collective Farms: Agrarian Class Societies—Cuba and Peru (London, 1977), Chs 13.Google Scholar