In the Shadows of the State is a fine and unusual study of indigenous politics, culture, and activism, which will be of interest to students of India as well as of the cultural politics of indigeneity elsewhere in the world. Alpa Shah provides a robust and non-sentimental ethnography of the realities and contradictions of tribal life, and a powerful critique of the practices of the state, NGOs, and the highly vocal middle-class activists who promote preservation of both natural resources and pristine tribal life.Thomas Blom Hansen, co-editor of States of Imagination: Ethnographic Explorations of the Postcolonial State
In the Shadows of the State is an important, original, thoughtful, and beautifully written book. I have no doubt that it will be considered the single most important account we have of state-society relations in Jharkhand. It is also a remarkably erudite and properly critical account of the production and use of indigeneity and development as social constructions that can contribute to the domination of poor rural Jharkhandis. Its significance ranges far beyond India.Stuart Corbridge, co-author of Jharkhand: Environment, Development, Ethnicity
Alpa Shahs book is an engaged and exceptionally lively account of the intersection between the everyday state and the people of one of Indias most marginalized Tribal areas. A major contribution to the regional literature, her sometimes counterintuitive, often sobering, but always compelling analysis richly deserves the attention of anyone interested in the politics of indigeneity and its uneasy relationship with class politics and with left-wing activism.Jonathan Parry, London School of Economics
Alpa Shahs In the shadows of the state is both thought provoking and highly accessible. Shahs work presents a valuable contribution to discussions surrounding the relationship between rural adivasi communities and the deep sources of inequality and misrepresentation which continue to affect their lives. [A]n important work. -- Ketan Alder * Contemporary South Asia *
This work is a powerful critique of those who speak in the name of the poor Adivasis in Jharkhand but use them only as a means for advancing their own interests; whether it is the developmental state or the indigenous rights activists or political parties. In its meticulous research, the book explores the dangers of culture-making in the name of the indigenous population. The study provides much insight for those who are interested in questions regarding the nature and functioning of the Indian state, caste system and indigenous rights activism as well for the Left movement in India. -- M. Muneer * Journal of Contemporary Asia *
In the Shadows of the State is a simple, engaging, and beautifully writtenbook that makes a significant and original contribution to the global literature on the politics and practice of indigeneity, and to the rich body of critical geographical and anthropological research on tribal life and politics in Jharkhand and eastern India. It should be required reading for all scholars and activists committed to resolving the awkward relationship between indigeneity and indigence. -- Haripriya Rangan * Journal of Asian Studies *
Abrilliant ethnography. Shah has succeeded in bringing a place, its people and their social and political relations to life. It is a pleasure to read, and an example of the possibility of skillful and expressive writing immersed in the texture of everyday life to enhance academic analysis. -- Colin McFarlane * Environment and Planning D *
Shah uses eight years of field experience among the Munda in the recently independent (2000) state of Jharkhand to demonstrate the limitations of identity politics in the liberation of the rural poor and marginalized in India. . . . Highly recommended. Most levels/libraries. -- B. Tavakolian * Choice *
Throughout the book aspirations, desires, and frustrations are all expressed by respondents in ways that do not fit the ways tribal communities are viewed by many of their external supporters. This is uncomfortable territory for many scholars and activists, yet the author forces readers to rethink their own positions and the choices we all make in our work. This is an outstanding book of importance for its content and the challenges it sets out to its readers.
-- Duncan McDuie-Ra * Asian Studies Review *
"A must-read for those interested in the politics of indigenous rights activism and its intersection with issues of governance and the environment." -- Brian Dudley * Agriculture and Human Values *