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| The Remembered Village (Center for South & Southeast Asia Studies) | 
enlarge | Author: M. N. Srinivas Publisher: University of California Press Category: Book
List Price: $32.95 Buy Used: $1.39 You Save: $31.56 (96%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 670666
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 392 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.5 x 1
ISBN: 0520039483 Dewey Decimal Number: 950 EAN: 9780520039483 ASIN: 0520039483
Publication Date: June 9, 1980 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: New Ed. 1980 Paperback. Orders usually ship on or before next business day. May have highlighting. We send best copy available.
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Good Psychology, Horrible Anthropology October 1, 2004 1 out of 6 found this review helpful
I read in the previous review that Srinivas is India's most distinguished anthropologist, and I would like to say that he most emphatically is NOT. Try Appadurai.
Srinivas is guilty of essentializing and exoticizing village life all throughout the book. He's clearly in search of the 'other', and not focused nearly enough on trying to achieve an unbiased, academic approach to interpreting culture. One example: "I looked about for villages which satisfied certain other criteria such as a multiplicity of castes, which grew rice as a major crop, were small enough to be studied by a single person, and finally, were not too 'progressive' or 'modern'....I had a feeling that the growing of rice would make my village more 'Asian' than it would be without rice...I wanted my village to be away from the main road, and to be without electricity and piped water."
Clearly, he's in search of an 'untouched primitive', and anyone who has spent even a day in India knows that such a person is nonexistent, and was not existent, even at the time his research was conducted. Furthermore, he lost all of his research findings when his office burnt down, so he wrote the entire ethnography from memory. It may be a good study of memory for a curious psychologist, but not for someone interested in learning about a culture.
However, I still recommend that all anthropology students buy it, if only to learn how one should NOT do ethnography. It is somewhat interesting, and if you have studied some anthropology you will probably be able to get around the generalizations and sweeping statements, and suck out some information.
An engrossing book by M.N.Srinivas April 14, 2004 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
I had never heard of M.N.Srinivas before seeing this book, since I am an not a "humanities" person, and Srinivas is apparently India's most distinguished anthropologist, well-known mostly in academic circles. The book is an account of life in Rampura, a village near Mysore in South India in the year 1948: it describes in detail people, customs and relationships in this village of about 1500 people. It reads like a long, engrossing story, with only occasional lapses into academic language.Srinivas spent the year of 1948 doing "field work" in Rampura, a village about 20 miles from Mysore. His goal was to research and document village life from a social anthropologist's point of view. Srinivas himself is a well-off, progressive Brahmin from the big town (Mysore) and shares almost nothing with the villagers. He views the village and its customs with the inquisitive curiosity of an outsider -- which makes his perspective valuable for the modern reader. However, Srinivas' perspective and sympathies are uniquely Indian, and cannot be duplicated by Western researchers writing on the same subject. After spending the entire year living among the villagers, eating, sleeping and going to the toilet like them, he establishes deep bonds with the village, which lead on to repeated visits in later years. Throughout the book emerge the simplicity and innocence of the villagers, alongside their often contradictory earthy and religious sides. Though Srinivas occasionally provides his own perspectives, he does not allow these to interfere with the raw description of his days, at once hilarious and touching, in the remembered village. The book has too many important insights into Indian village life to list. You will have to read it yourself to enjoy them. People who understand Kannada will enjoy this book even more because they may be able to relate to some of the typical village expressions (sometimes written alongside in parantheses). However, the book is by no means accessible to the reader from Karnataka alone. In fact, it manages a unique balance between genericity and specificity. It would have been even nicer if Srinivas had published some of the very many photographs he reports he took of the village and the villagers; one hopes that future editions of this book will try and include them. A book such as this can only become more valuable with the passage of time. It is a must-read for the modern Indian reader, especially the urban reader. It will make Indians understand better the parts of their culture which have roots in the villages. I wish such books existed about all regions in all parts of the world: it is the perfect kind of book to read about a culture one doesn't fully understand -- even one's own.
Warm, in-depth portrait of a Karnataka village in 1948 May 30, 2000 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
Neither anthropologists nor men come much better than M.N. Srinivas, who passed away not long ago. One of the first Indians to write on the ethnography of his own country, he studied in England with both Radcliffe-Brown and Evans-Pritchard, now deities in the hagiography of Anthropology. Back in 1948, Srinivas studied a village in what was then Mysore state, investigating everything he could, from agriculture to caste relationships, from religion to village politics. It was the classic style of field study. In succeeding years, Srinivas published a large number of important articles and several books, including "Religion and Society among the Coorgs of South India", "Caste in Modern India and other essays" and "Social Change in Modern India". He never actually got around to writing up his old village study. In 1970, he was a fellow at Berkeley and finally was about to finish the work. An arsonist burned his office and all three copies of the work. THE REMEMBERED VILLAGE, then, is literally "remembered" because the bulk of the work went up in flames, though some notes were saved and the original data was in Delhi. What emerges is a wonderful portrait of an Indian anthropologist's time in the field, his relationship with the various villagers, and a lovingly detailed picture of the village itself, covering all the usual aspects of an anthropological study. Perhaps adversity and misfortune combined to produce a greater work. As an anthropologist who has worked on India for many years and as a person who was impressed with the warmth and humanity of Prof. Srinivas (though I only met him briefly many years ago in Australia), I strongly recommend this book to anyone who wants to know the feel, the look, and the inner workings of an Indian village back in the days before the Green Revolution, television, and globalisation. This is Anthropology without jargon, India from the inside.
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