Andre Beteille

Duration: 1 hour 18 mins 32 secs
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Description: Andre Beteille speaks of his childhood and natural inclination to anthropology, his training, fieldwork in Dehli and the influence of his supervisor, M.N. Srinivas. He discusses his work on equality and inequality in human societies and publications on such, especially the caste system. He relflects on and analyses the work of Dumont, as well as Marxism, Hinduism and Islam. He cites those who have influenced him and his work, and closes with an overview of his current interests in Nationalism and tribal identities in India, as well as his lectures on backward classes.Interviewed by Alan Macfarlane on 1st June 1986, filmed by Julian Jacobs and lasting 1 hr 20 mins. Generously supported by the Leverhulme Trust.
 
Created: 2011-03-17 12:15
Collection: Film Interviews with Leading Thinkers
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: Professor Alan Macfarlane
Language: eng (English)
Keywords: religion; caste; power; india;
Credits:
Actor:  Andre Beteille
Director:  Alan Macfarlane
Reporter:  Julian Jacobs
Transcript
Transcript:
0:00:05 Introduction; childhood and family background, father French, mother Bengali; at College in Calcutta started as a student of physics but changed to anthropology; eventually began teaching in the Department of Sociology at Delhi University

0:02:32 Had natural inclination to compare ways of life because of own mixed background and prompted orientation towards anthropology

0:03:26 Did honours degree in anthropology at University of Calcutta and afterwards an M.Sc. taught degree; shortly after the Department of Sociology opened in Delhi and was emerging as premier department so moved there as a lecturer in sociology and began research for Ph.D. degree; department headed by M.N. Srinivas with whom I worked for Ph.D.

0:04:35 Influenced by N.K. Bose; memories of Srinivas; stress on the importance of fieldwork; had first intended to work with Tamal speakers in Delhi; Srinivas insisted I work in an area very different from the one in which I had grown up which was unusual for social studies in India

0:08:45 Choice of Tanjore mainly own idea; had intended to study temples and how they worked; first impressions of Tanjore; Tamal speakers, living with Brahmins and found I could understand their ritual language; Mother’s family were orthodox Brahmins; Grandmother particularly religious and noted similar behaviour among widows in Tanjore; surprised by relations between castes which were much more formal than in Calcutta or Delhi; Brahmins attention to detail

0:13:08 Experience of fieldwork; feelings about loss of privacy; didn’t really enjoy fieldwork except in retrospect

0:16:24 ‘Caste, Class and Power’ was written from Ph.D. thesis; a village study; previous books of village studies by F.G. Bailey, Adrian Mayer and McKim Marriott based on caste structure; own work added class and power structure; examined the changing relationship between the three and the forces that brought about the change; reflections on deficiencies in the book

0:22:53 Interest in equality and inequality in human societies; after book published pursued work on caste in larger context than one village which appeared as ‘Castes: Old and New’; moved on to study class through agrarian relations and only after that to the more general theme of inequality

0:25:06 Srinivas’s work on caste limited; own essay ‘The Future of the Backward Classes: The competing demands of status and power’ looked at wider political issues than just sanscritization

0:27:20 Own thoughts on future of the caste system; won’t disappear but will change; Hinduism and the religious basis of caste; life inconceivable without some inequality; premise of equality in societies in past and present, East and West; conflict in West between value of achievement and equality; exacerbated in secular societies with lack of an afterlife to correct inequalities

0:37:08 Reflections on the work of Louis Dumont; Marxism and extreme positions; unsatisfactory nature of Dumont’s which work equates Indian society with Hinduism; too little appreciation of the economic and political forces in contemporary India

0:39:48 Second reason for unsatisfactory nature of Dumont’s work; Marxism much more important but very holistic; collective identities; Dumont’s work on India is important but needed more emphasis on material factors rather than ideas; Dumont’s work had shifted Indian sociology from the field view to book view of Indian society, now need to redress the balance

0:47:29 Hinduism and Islam; Hindu pluralism and Islamic fundamentalism; India and China and the management of polity; India’s weakness may be related to proliferation of religions where China’s strength is that it generated few

0:52:26 Reflections on Europe and India; thoughts on the future of scheduled tribes in India

0:56:31 Importance of the work of N.K. Bose; ‘The Structure of Hindu Society’ foreshadows much of the work of Dumont and Pocock; he was a great fieldworker and lived with tribal people and showed the value of ethnographic observation combined with classical texts; showed how it was; differences between Bose and Srinivas; Bose’s political interests

1:01:15 Among British anthropologists, most influenced by Evans-Pritchard through his writings and his influence on M.N. Srinivas and Max Gluckman; Simon Fellowship at Manchester; Gluckman’s contributions to anthropology; John Barnes idea of social networks

1:06:22 Memories of Edmund Leach; ‘Political Systems of Highland Burma’; shook British anthropology out of its complacency but avoided the role of a guru; Meyer Fortes and his influence on Srinivas; a craftsman

1:12:09 Sociology and anthropology; dominance of ideas of Radcliffe-Brown in 1950’s then Levi-Strauss in 1980’s changed nature of anthropology

1:14:40 Nationalism in India and tribal identities; integration; sub-nationalism; religious identity;

1:17:05 Now working on backward classes and their position in Indian society based on Smut’s Lectures given in Cambridge in 1985.
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