Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T22:41:15.010Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Economies of Love: Love marriage, kin support, and aspiration in a South Indian garment city*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 April 2016

GEERT DE NEVE*
Affiliation:
University of Sussex, United Kingdom Email: [email protected]

Abstract

The article considers narratives and experiences of love marriage in the garment city of Tiruppur in Tamil Nadu, South India. As a booming centre of garment production, Tiruppur attracts a diverse migrant workforce of young men and women who have plenty of opportunity to fall in love and enter marriages of their own making. Based on long-term ethnographic research, the article explores what love marriages mean to those involved, how they are experienced and talked about, and how they shape postmarital lives. Case studies reveal that a discourse of loss of postmarital kin support is central to evaluations of love marriages by members of Tiruppur's labouring classes. Such marriages not only flout parental authority and often cross caste and religious boundaries, but they also jeopardize the much-needed kin support youngsters require to fulfil aspirations of mobility, entrepreneurship, and success in a post-liberalization environment. It is argued that critical evaluations of love marriages not only disrupt modernist assumptions of linear transformations in marital practices, but they also constitute a broader critique of the neoliberal celebration of the ‘individual’ while reaffirming the continued importance of caste endogamy, parental involvement, and kin support to success in India's post-reform economy.

Type
Negotiations
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

The research upon which this article is based was supported by an ESRC-DfID research grant (RES-167-25-0296). I am grateful to Priya, Arul, and Muthu for research assistance in the field. The article was presented at the European Conference for South Asian Studies in Lisbon, 2012, and benefited from comments by the participants. Thanks also to Grace Carswell, Henrike Donner, Chris Fuller, Filippo Osella, Jonathan Parry, and Gonçalo Santos for detailed feedback. All shortcomings remain my own.

References

1 Donner, H. (2012). Love and marriage, globally. Anthropology of This Century, 4, MayGoogle Scholar.

2 Hirsch, J. S. and Wardlow, H. (2006). Modern Loves: The Anthropology of Romantic Courtship and Companionate Marriage, University of Michigan Press, MichiganCrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3 Thomas, L. M. and Cole, J. (2009). ‘Introduction: Thinking through Love in Africa’ in Cole, J. and Thomas, L. M.Love in Africa, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, p. 4Google Scholar.

4 Kishwar, M. (1994). Love and marriage. Manushi, 80, pp. 1119Google Scholar.

5 Grover, S. (2009). Lived experiences: Marriage, notions of love, and kinship support amongst poor women in Delhi. Contributions to Indian Sociology, 43:1, pp. 133CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6 Grover, Lived experiences, p. 1.

7 Grover, S. (2011). Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support: Lived Experiences of the Urban Poor in India, Social Science Press, New Delhi, p. 10Google Scholar.

8 Grover, Lived experiences, p. 5.

9 Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support, p. 10.

10 This article is based on long-term ethnographic research carried out over a total of more than 20 months since 2000 in and around the city of Tiruppur in Tamil Nadu. The research included, among other methods, extensive semi-structured interviewing, the collection of detailed life histories, and different forms of participant observation in garment factories.

11 Corbridge, S., Harriss, J., and Jeffrey, C. (2013). India Today: Economy, Politics and Society, Polity Press, Cambridge, Chapter 2Google Scholar.

12 Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support, pp. 2–3.

13 Gooptu, N. (ed.) (2013). Enterprise Culture in Neoliberal India: Studies in Youth, Class, Work and Media, Routledge, OxfordGoogle Scholar; Plummer, K. (1994). Telling Sexual Stories: Power, Change and Social Worlds, Routledge, LondonGoogle Scholar.

14 Gooptu, N. (2013). ‘Introduction’ in Gooptu, N. Enterprise Culture in Neoliberal India: Studies in Youth, Class, Work and Media, Routledge, AbingdonGoogle Scholar.

15 Donner, H. (2002). ‘One's own marriage’: Love marriages in a Calcutta neighbourhood. South Asia Research, 22:1, pp. 7994CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Donner, Love and marriage, globally; Grover, Lived experiences.

16 Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support, p. 3.

17 Ibid., p. 3.

18 Donner, ‘One's own marriage’, p. 83; Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support, p. 3.

19 Donner, ‘One's own marriage’; Fuller, C. J. and Narasimhan, H. (2008). Companionate marriage in India: The changing marriage system in a middle-class Brahman subcaste. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 14:4, pp. 736–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20 Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support, p. 207.

22 Fuller and Narasimhan, Companionate marriage in India, p. 748.

22 De Neve, G. (2011). ‘“Keeping it in the Family”: Work, Education and Gender Hierarchies among Tiruppur's Industrial Capitalists’ in Donner, H.Being Middle-Class in India: A Way of Life, Routledge, AbingdonGoogle Scholar.

23 Kapadia, K. (1995). Siva and Her Sisters: Gender, Caste and Class in Rural South India, Westview Press, BoulderGoogle Scholar.

24 Srinivasan, S. (2005). Daughters or dowries? The changing nature of dowry practices in South India. World Development, 33:4, pp. 593615CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Srinivasan, S. and A. S. Bedi (2007). Domestic violence and dowry: Evidence from a South Indian village. World Development, 35:5, pp. 857–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

25 Srinivasan, Daughters or dowries?.

26 Caplan, L. (1984). Bridegroom price in urban India: Class, caste and ‘dowry evil’ among Christians in Madras. Man, 19:2, pp. 216–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

27 Srinivasan, Daughters or dowries?, p. 603.

28 Census of India. (2011). Available at: http://www.census2011.co.in/census/city/494-tiruppur.html, [accessed 15 January 2016]; http://www.censusindia.gov.in/2011-prov-results/prov_data_products_tamilnadu.html [accessed 30 December 2015]; Census of India. (2001). Available at: http://www.censusindia.gov.in/towns/tn_towns.pdf, [accessed 26 February 2016].

29 Census of India. (2011). Available at: http://www.censusindia.gov.in/2011-prov-results/prov_data_products_tamilnadu.html, [accessed 30 December 2015].

30 Carswell, G. (2013). Dalits and local labour markets in rural India: Experiences from the Tiruppur textile region in Tamil Nadu. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 38:2, pp. 325–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar; De Neve, G. (2014). Entrapped entrepreneurship: Labour contractors in the South Indian garment industry. Modern Asian Studies, 38:5, pp. 1302–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

31 Chari, S. (2004). Fraternal Capital: Peasant-Workers, Self-made Men and Globalization in Provincial India, Stanford University Press, StanfordGoogle Scholar; De Neve, G. (2003). Expectations and rewards of modernity: Commitment and mobility among rural migrants in Tirupur, Tamil Nadu. Contributions to Indian Sociology, 37:1&2, pp. 251–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

32 Carswell, G. and De Neve, G. (2014). T-Shirts and tumblers: Caste, dependency and work under neo-liberalisation in South India. Contributions to Indian Sociology, 48:1, pp. 103–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

33 Vera-Sanso, P. (1995). Community, seclusion and female labour force participation in Madras, India. Third World Planning Review, 17:2, pp. 155–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lessinger, J. (2002). Work and love: The limits of autonomy for female garment workers in India. Anthropology of Work Review, 23:1&2, pp. 1318CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Osella, C. and Osella, F. (2006). Men and Masculinities in South India, Anthem Press, London; De Neve, Entrapped entrepreneurshipGoogle Scholar.

34 Shah, A. (2006). The labour of love: Seasonal migration from Jharkhand to the brick kilns of other states in India. Contributions to Indian Sociology, 40:1, pp. 91118CrossRefGoogle Scholar; for a discussion of similar spaces of male–female interaction in rural contexts, see Osella, F. and Osella, C. (1998). On flirting and friendship: Micro-politics in a hierarchical society. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 4:2, pp. 189206CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

35 Cross, J. (2014). Dream Zones: Anticipating Capitalism and Development in India, Pluto Press, LondonGoogle Scholar.

36 Cross, Dream Zones, p. 1.

37 Chari, Fraternal Capital; De Neve, Expectations and rewards of modernity.

38 Chari, Fraternal Capital; De Neve, Entrapped entrepreneurship.

39 De Neve, Entrapped entrepreneurship.

40 Gooptu, ‘Introduction’.

41 Grover, Lived experiences; Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support.

42 Thomas and Cole, ‘Introduction’, p. 16.

43 Ibid., p. 16.

44 Gooptu, ‘Introduction’, pp. 9–14.

45 Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support, p. 204.

46 Gooptu, ‘Introduction’, p. 3.

47 Parry, J. (2001). Ankalu's errant wife: Sex, marriage and industry in contemporary Chhattisgarh. Modern Asian Studies, 35:4, p. 817CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

48 Bloch, M. and J. Parry (1989). ‘Introduction’ in Bloch, M. and Parry, J.Money and the Morality of Exchange, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, p. 2Google Scholar.

49 Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support; Parry, J. (2004). ‘The Marital History of a “Thumb Impression Man”’ in Arnold, D. and Blackburn, S.Telling Lives: South Asian Life Histories, Permanent Black/Indiana University Press, New Delhi/Bloomington; Parry, Ankalu's errant wifeGoogle Scholar.

50 Baas, M. (2009). The IT caste: Love and arranged marriages in the IT industry of Bangalore. South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, 32:2, pp. 285307CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Donner, ‘One's own marriage’; Fuller and Harasimhan, Companionate marriage in India; Grover, Marriage, Love, Caste and Kinship Support; Lessinger, J. (2013). ‘“Love” in the Shadow of the Sewing Machine: A Study of Marriage in the Garment Industry of Chennai, South India’ in Kaur, R. and Palriwala, R.Marrying in South Asia: Shifting Concepts, Changing Practices in a Globalising World, Orient Blackswan, New DelhiGoogle Scholar.

51 Giddens, A. (1992). The Transformation of Intimacy: Sexuality, Love and Eroticism in Modern Societies, Polity Press, CambridgeGoogle Scholar.

52 Cole, J. (2009). ‘Love, Money, and Economies of Intimacy in Tamatave, Madagascar’ in Cole and Thomas, Love in Africa; Srinivasan, Daughters or dowries?CrossRefGoogle Scholar