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Unearthing Gender Folksongs of North India 1st Edition
Smita Tewari Jassal Digital Instant Download
Author(s): Smita Tewari Jassal
ISBN(s): 9780822394792, 0822394790
Edition: 1
File Details: PDF, 2.10 MB
Year: 2012
Language: english
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
Unearthing Gender
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
Unearthing Gender c
Folksongs of North India
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
∫ 2012 Duke University Press
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
on acid-free paper $
Typeset in Adobe Garamond Pro by
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Hear the bells ring
the notes of a chime
when our words may not
the worlds will rhyme.
from ‘‘ temple bells, ’’
raminder singh jassal
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
To the memory of my father
jagdish narain tewari (1925–1990)
and for raminder (1952–2011)
who made life a song.
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
contents
Acknowledgments xi
Note on Transliteration and Pronunciation xvii
Introduction 1
the unsung sing
Chapter One 33
the daily grind
Chapter Two 71
singing bargains
Chapter Three 115
biyah /biraha
Emotions in a Rite of Passage
Chapter Four 155
sita’ s trials
Chapter Five 189
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
acknowledgments
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
xii b acknowledgments
thank Sunil Khilnani at sais, Johns Hopkins University, and Dean Good-
man and Shalini Venturelli of American University, along with Sonalde
Desai and Aseema Sinha. The perspectives of Israel’s Nirit Singers, Bar-
bara Johnson and Skaria Zacharia, experts on songs of Israel’s Cochin
Jews, helped strengthen my own arguments. Ruth Freed, Manjula
Kumar, Dakshita Das, and M. J. Akbar deserve warm thanks for directing
me to sources of songs, and Ali Kucukler, for supplying Devnagari fonts. I
sorely miss the energy and support of the anthropologist Ruth Cernea,
who as my walking companion in Bethesda shared the highs and the lows
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
acknowledgments c xiii
of the writing process but, alas, is no longer with us to celebrate the final
product.
I am grateful to Jaunpur’s Ajay Kumar Singh and his friends for engag-
ing me in fascinating conversations about music and for introducing me
to folk musicians in Chachakpur village and musical experts in Jaunpur
city. Through Daulat Ram of Bharatiya Jan Sewa Ashram, Badlapur, and
Munnilal of Barsara, I was able to contact a number of village commu-
nities, including those of Sauraiyan and Barsara, whose songs are cap-
tured in these pages. I thank Brahm Deo Upadhyaya for his assistance
during the many field trips I made in Jaunpur district. In Misraulia,
Chhapra, Ajay Mishra and his family generously shared their musical
treasures. Thanks to him, the sessions I attended at the village temple at
Misraulia will remain forever etched in my memory. Avinash Chaudhury
and Radhey Shyam Nishad introduced me to singers in Sadiapur, Al-
lahabad, and Rakesh Pandey, to singing communities in and around
Benaras. Nirmal and Ajay Pandey, Rajeev Singh, and Momita Mukho-
padhyay were particularly helpful in directing me to Sita songs circulat-
ing in Ballia, Ghazipur, and Chandauli. I thank Muniza Khan for intro-
ducing me to the Dalit and Muslim communities of Katesar village near
Ramnagar, Benaras. I thank Shubhra Nagalia for introducing me to the
singers of Kala Commune and to other folk music enthusiasts in Benaras,
including Vidya Niwas Mishra. I relied on Shyam Lal Nishad for all
manner of information in Benaras, and through Arun Mishra, I was able
to contact folk singers in Robertsganj, and Dankinganj, Mirzapur.
Ashok Choudhary, Hazari Singh Pankaj, Roma, Bharati, and many
others of the U.P. Abhiyān Samitı̄ deserve my warm thanks for facilitating
my earliest recordings at the various workshops across Uttar Pradesh. I
made many of the recordings while working on research projects at New
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
xiv b acknowledgments
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
acknowledgments c xv
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
note on transliteration and pronunciation
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction
What is the question here, as I have already said, is the ability to ‘‘hear’’
that which we have not heard before, and to transgress in situating the
text or the ‘‘fragment’’ di√erently.
pandey, ‘‘voices from the edge,’’ 285
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
2 b introduction
and reinforced but also resisted and interrogated, they also enable us to
address the question of agency. Since songs are integral to people’s lives in
rural settings, the light they shed on caste, kinship and marriage, work
cultures, gender, power, sexuality, family life, patriarchy, and the forms of
agency and constraint operating within the same framework turns them
into a resource for anthropological research.
Additionally, since songs ‘‘provide a medium for expressing emotions
that are taboo topics in everyday conversations,’’ (Narayan 1986, 56) sub-
jecting these texts to close scrutiny allows us a glimpse of people’s intimate
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c3
worlds. In cultures that do not openly discuss inner emotional states,
songs are the shared tradition through which emotions are expressed,
thus providing a medium for the expression of what might be taboo in
everyday conversation (ibid). For instance, in the emotionally charged
fragment below, about a visiting brother’s dismay at his sister’s unhappi-
ness, we also learn that women are prone to conceal details about ill
treatment in their marital homes, so as not to alarm their natal kin.
Sonvā t jarai bahinı̄ sonarā dukaniyā
Bahinı̄ jarthı̄n sasurariyā ho Ram
Loharā t jarai bahinı̄ loharā dukaniyā
Bahinı̄ jarthı̄n sasurariyā ho Ram
E dukh jani kahiyā bhaiyā Bābā ke agvā
Sabhavā baithı̄ pactaihen ho Ram
E dukh jani kahiyā Maiyā ke agavā
Chatiyā pı̄ti mari jaihen ho Ram.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
4 b introduction
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c5
Kahiyā bidāyi dihalā
Buxar me dhāhi dihalā
Gaiyā niyare pagahā dharavalā, ho Bābujı̄
Pahilā me budhā baravā
Dūsar garı̄b ho gharavā
Tı̄sar me jadūgaravā khojalā, ho Bābujı̄
The concerns and worlds of Dalit and subaltern women have largely
remained obscure, not only because of upper-caste men and women’s
distance from Dalit struggles but also because of the latter’s lack of inte-
gration into mainstream knowledge, academic disciplines, and even the
middle-class women’s movement. While, like the rural and urban worlds,
the worlds of marginalized or Dalit women and those of women of the
upper castes remain distinct, hints at how these worlds have been some-
times bridged can be found in the songs.
If women’s early literary expressions were aimed at greater visibility,
the opposite tendency of anonymity emerges as the dominant feature
here. Songs have allowed women (and men) through the ages to articu-
late, acknowledge, and a≈rm shared impressions. Hence their validity for
large collectivities, especially those of women, o√ering precisely the kind
of anonymity that facilitated the fleshing-out and articulation of shared
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
experiences.
Songs constitute the spaces wherein the collective voice of women may
be said to have evolved. Since repertoires largely associated with agricul-
tural tasks are being steadily eclipsed with the mechanization of farming,
the urgent need to document them cannot be overstated. Further, In-
dians’ simultaneous distancing of themselves from folksongs as represen-
tative of the ‘‘old’’ ways or their modifications and reworkings of these
songs to address contemporary concerns o√er other compelling ratio-
nales for this investigation.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
6 b introduction
lad) traditions retain their vitality not only because they are largely per-
formative and remembered by village bards but also because they are
periodically renewed through all-night celebrations and festivities. In
contrast, women’s songs, while also integral to ceremonies and rites of
passage, tend to accompany agricultural work or other forms of produc-
tive activity. However, it is useful to remember that, in addition to classi-
cal musicians, folk singers and bards received the patronage of upper-
caste elites and landlords, thereby reproducing the existing inequities of
caste and class.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c7
unearthing gender
contexts. They are therefore loaded with meaning precisely because of the
interplay of intertextual resonances wherein each seemingly isolated song
may in fact be related to others, which often represent competing view-
points and voices within the given folksong tradition. These strong inter-
textual connections and interactive relationships between the songs of a
region are what make them so e√ective as forms of social communica-
tion. The fact that folksongs are sung again and again and passed down
through generations also indicates the high degree of acceptability of the
ideas, moods, and messages they contain.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
8 b introduction
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c9
Younger brother-in-law took charge.
When the Neem seed was ready to drop,
Husband dear took control.
field recording, robertsganj, 2002
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
10 b introduction
that these narratives hold for their singers is both essentially variable and
made more so as a function of context.
Therefore it should come as no surprise that when the social reformers
of the nineteenth century sought to regulate and sanitize certain kinds of
women’s songs, they also sought to urgently replace them with ‘‘proper’’
and ‘‘correct’’ alternatives. Songs considered corrupting and indecent
were thus to be expunged from the repertoires of the new Hindu woman
the social reformers hoped to shape. The emerging compilations and
anthologies produced by men seeking to replace women’s so-called trivial
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c 11
songs with inspiring ādarsh gı̄t (idealistic songs) in the service of the
nation signaled this new trend:
Dekho lajjā ke darpan me tum mukhrā
Pativratā kı̄ orho cunariyā,
shı̄l ka nainon me ho kajrā
including the form and content of performances, despite the fact that
recitals by women Vaishnavite kathākatās, or storytellers, were an im-
portant source of religious knowledge for women (Banerjee 1989, 151).
Krishna’s erotic dalliances, metaphorically understood as the locking to-
gether in total involvement of the body and the mind, suddenly ap-
peared, under colonial influence, to threaten domestic stability. More-
over, in this context, the erotic is envisioned entirely from the woman’s
perspective, and the excitement of erotic love unites with ideas about the
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
12 b introduction
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c 13
themselves, at several points in this book. For instance, while certain well-
known Sita songs, the subject of chapter 4, may be claimed by all castes,
the plurality of voices they represent embody a range of meanings and
divergent viewpoints. Their singular appeal to the women who sing them
appears to derive from the fact that Sita songs mirror peasant women’s
own existential struggles with their socially constructed roles.
Jab re Sita dei Tulsi hāthe lihalı̄, Tulsi gailı̄ sukhāi ai
Aisen purukhvā ke muh nahin dekhabı̄
Jini Ram dehlen banvās ai
Phāti jaiti dhartı̄ alop hoi jaiti re, ab na dekhabı̄ sansār ai
how structures of gender, class, caste, and race shape or a√ect the possibil-
ities for agency.
Limited views of agency in western feminist discourses fail to account
for the lives of women shaped by nonliberal traditions. Such discourses
seldom problematize women’s desire to resist. Moreover, their assump-
tion that women’s actions emerge from their own free will, rather than
from the dictates of custom, tradition, or direct coercion, is one that
has been naturalized in the scholarship on gender (208). Instead of simply
taking this for granted, it might be more useful to determine di√er-
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
14 b introduction
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c 15
Focusing on the terms that people use to organize their lives and that
might be ‘‘constitutive of di√erent forms of personhood, knowledge and
experience’’ (16) allows for conceptualizing agency ‘‘not simply as a syn-
onym for resistance to relations of domination, but as a capacity for
action that specific relations of subordination create and enable’’ (18). The
songs suggest not only that women are influenced by the larger social and
political structures but also that their actions, in turn, impact these struc-
tures. As Sherry Ortner has argued, ‘‘human beings make society just as
society makes them.’’ Yet if, in the process of reproducing society, society
is also transformed, a notion of agency that is socially, linguistically, and
culturally constrained is a more e√ective one when trying to understand
how women are sometimes complicit with, while also making accom-
modations for or reinforcing, the status quo—often all at the same time
(Ahearn 2000, 12–15).
In defining agency as the socio-culturally mediated capacity to act,
Laura Ahearn suggests that instead of passively taking in the songs, we
might also fruitfully look for how the kinds of meanings that might
emerge are constrained, that is, how these meanings are socially mediated
and ‘‘intertextually situated within a bounded universe of discourse’’
(Ahearn 2001, 111). Since singing communities have their own beliefs,
values, ways of talking, and even power relations that emerge over the
course of their mutual endeavors, the term ‘‘communities of practice’’ as
‘‘aggregates of people who come together around mutual engagement,’’ a
processual yet structural unit may be identified, one that is both constitu-
tive of and constituted by its participants. The extent, then, to which the
following songs broaden our understanding of women’s agency remains a
core question of this inquiry.
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
fieldwork
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
16 b introduction
speaking region. During this period, I also attended the Buxar melā (fair)
where I met itinerant singers, whose songs have enriched this collection.
Along with my fieldwork villages in Chhapra district of Bihar, the
Jaunpur and Benaras districts in Uttar Pradesh constitute a large chunk of
the hinterland that, since the days of the East India Company, provided
the workforce for the growing port city of Calcutta and, subsequently,
migrant labor to the sugar colonies of the Caribbean, Fiji, and Mauritius.
Folksongs provide a rich source for understanding how migration shaped
the consciousness of the region. As my song collection grew, the links
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c 17
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
18 b introduction
average of five acres of land, worked both by family and hired labor. The
financial stability of this class of former landholders has enabled substan-
tial investment in threshers, tube wells, and tractor rentals. The small-
scale nature of agriculture has produced a corresponding decrease in the
dependence on hired labor. Benefiting from the break-up of large land-
holdings were the former sharecroppers and tenants belonging to the
middle caste of Yadavas, who thereby secured ownership and control over
land and today constitute the majority of small landholders. Women
from intermediate castes are skillful and industrious agriculturists, and
their economic contributions have, in no small measure, contributed to
the recent prosperity of castes such as the Yadavas, Kurmis, and Koeris.
Chamars, the Dalit (downtrodden) caste in the region who occupy the
bottom rungs of caste and class hierarchies, remain landless.
caste and class backgrounds to share these songs with outsiders made this
discourse an accessible point of entry during fieldwork.
Between 1997 and 2000, I regularly participated in grass-roots work-
shops organized by the ‘‘U.P. Bhūmi Sudhār aur Shyam Adhikāri Abhi-
yān Samitı̄,’’ the Movement for Uttar Pradesh Land Reforms and Labor
Rights, a loose coalition of approximately thirty ngos that came together
in 1997 to work on agrarian issues in several districts of Uttar Pradesh.
The discussions generated at these village- and district-level meetings,
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c 19
where participants ranged from activists, administrators, academics, and
legal experts to small and marginal farmers, tenants, and agricultural
laborers, sharpened my research questions. These song collections owe a
tremendous amount to the monthly sessions of the Abhiyān Samitı̄.
During my years of fieldwork I have found that women, despite being
silenced in other spheres and contexts and reluctant to volunteer infor-
mation on contested issues such as the nature of rights and entitlements
to land or to share their points of view even when coaxed to do so,
nevertheless participate in song sessions with great enthusiasm and lack
of inhibition. On many occasions, asking women to sing individually or
collectively was infinitely more rewarding than asking them to elaborate
on a particular theme through a series of questions or in focus-group
discussions. Over time, as the collections and genres evolved and revealed
their treasures, it became clear that many issues on which women were
otherwise reluctant or unable to voice an opinion were in fact explored in
the various song genres. Rarely, for instance, did I elicit responses on the
theme of women’s rights to land, largely because this theme constituted a
di√erent discourse for them. Women were often unable to connect the
culture of disinheritance with the immediate marginality they were expe-
riencing. The political explosiveness of the subject also hindered frank
expression. In this setting, marked by the systematic denial of women’s
rights to land, marriage songs wherein brides claim their shares from
fathers spoke volumes. The song below is a stunning example, spelling
out the sleight of hand by which women are denied rights in natal proper-
ties. We hear both smugness and relief in the father’s tone as he evokes the
bride’s vermilion, the symbol of matrimony that will eliminate the threat
to the property of the patrilineage that unmarried daughters pose.
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
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20 b introduction
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c 21
Dalit women, I soon had misgivings about the recording session’s loca-
tion, a spacious hall in one of three sprawling dwellings belonging to the
Brahmin landlord and his extended family for whom the women worked
as daily wage laborers. The setting was far from neutral, even if it did
provide soothing shelter from the oppressive noonday sun. This lack of
neutrality became apparent as soon as the Dalit women, some of them
veiled, arrived and seated themselves on the floor.
As I had commonly experienced during fieldwork, recording in-
variably attracted inquisitive youngsters. On this occasion, too, sundry
adolescent youths from the extended Brahmin household entered and
sprawled themselves on a divan at the far end of the large room. Middle-
aged Brahmin women and girls stood outside, peeping in through the
windows. Led by a senior Dalit woman in her sixties, the singers began
the session, while one among them, sat sideways and heavily veiled, her
singing barely audible. At first it appeared that, despite the unequal social
relations the context underlined, a mood of cozy familiarity was building,
with easy banter exchanged between the youths and the senior singer.
The singers sang:
Dhı̄re re dhı̄re devā baris gailen
Ab anganā me lāgal bāre kāi re, man dhı̄re re dhı̄re
Anganā me chalali ho bahinı̄
Ab tangvā gailen bichhlāi re man dhı̄re re dhı̄re
Dhāval dhūpal, alien unke bhaiyā
Godiyā me lihalı̄ bator re man dhı̄re.
‘‘Are bahinā kaunā gatar lāgal chot re man’’ . . .
‘‘Ānjar choro bhaiyā, pānjar choro
Ab sirvā me lāgal bāre cot re man dhı̄re re dhı̄re
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
22 b introduction
The song’s mischievous punch is packed in the last two lines where, in
response to his sister’s request for a ‘‘cooling’’ ointment for her bruise, the
brother playfully suggests a ‘‘hot’’ remedy—a concoction of chilies and oel
fruit. As the singers completed the song, women of the surrounding
Brahmin households had taken positions around the hall and were even
encouraging the singers with song suggestions. By then the singers were
looking increasing uncomfortable with the overwhelming male presence
in the room. The source of their discomfort was the male gaze from the
exclusively male, though youthful, audience sprawled on the divan, a set-
ting that evoked traditional gender and caste hierarchies. Just as I was
about to interrupt the session and exercise my researcher’s privilege to
request the impromptu audience to leave, the women sang a lewd version
of the same song!
In the second version, the women substituted the names of the sister
and brother with the names of two young siblings from the Brahmin
household, thus casting the most o√ensive youth on the divan as the
incestuous brother of the song. The sister was first named and then
referred to throughout the remainder of the song as the ‘‘slut.’’ In place of
the medical remedy suggested, the women made up and sang out an
improbably funny concoction, detailing various anatomical parts of don-
keys and pigs, to be rubbed on the sister’s forehead. The allusion to sibling
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
incest and the obvious vulgarity and derision worked as a signal for upper
caste males to leave or to be prepared for further insults and name-calling.
The youths wisely chose the former. The women had succeeded in forcing
the youths sprawled on the divan to leave the hall in embarrassment.
Where the honor of women is the real indicator of status, playfully in-
sulting the women of the Brahmin household, through the otherwise
nonthreatening medium of song, proved e√ective, evoking for me the
genre of galı̄s (insulting wedding songs). The incident powerfully brought
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
introduction c 23
home the fact that songs have constituted one of the few spaces for
resistance traditionally available to lower caste women. As soon as the men
left, the tension lifted, the young Dalit woman revealed her beautiful face,
and as her veil slipped away wonderful full-throated singing emerged
from the room and hovered over the village all afternoon.
Abu-Lughod’s notion of ‘‘resistance as a diagnostic of power’’ o√ers
one way to understand the Dalit women’s response to the unequal power
relations. While many of the songs indeed reflect a reality, they also create
that reality with important socio-cultural implications, thereby demon-
strating the intertwining of language and power as well as the importance
of both text and context.
deal about the concrete ways in which the cultural worlds of men and
women remain separated and, as such, how the gender of the researcher
determines the kinds of data accessed.
The nature of the masculine singing traditions, from which women
are excluded, hit home in a stark and striking way. Despite my participa-
tion and involvement in the festivities associated with a wedding in a
village near Chhapra, western Bihar, I was discouraged from attending
the all-night entertainment for the groom’s party that the bride’s family
had arranged. My hosts’ rationale was that proceedings could become
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
24 b introduction
rowdy or violent and women may be unsafe, but I suspect that since
women are not to be seen at such events, they were being protective.
Reluctantly, I was forced to hear the entire performance throughout the
night, as it was broadcast on loudspeakers, and could only watch the
proceedings captured on video the next day. Accordingly, I am unable to
record my impression of the audience and its response.
The stirring Launda-nāch≤ performance was given by a rural Dalit
traveling theatre and musical company consisting of eight seasoned ac-
tors, impersonators, singers, and musicians who held the packed rural
audience spellbound until dawn. The show that began with bawdy and
humorous singing around midnight had, within the space of a few hours,
transformed into something elevated and profound. The tenor of the
singing in the wee hours—at once melodious, inspired, and haunting—
was interspersed with appeals to social justice. As in the best traditions of
such rural performances, the most compelling feature of this perfor-
mance was the artful and skillful assumption of female personae by an all-
male cast (see Hansen 1992). I later found out that the actors and musi-
cians in the company were landless laborers and marginal farmers who
adopted this performance as a supplementary source of livelihood during
the wedding season. Indeed, when traveling through the rural coun-
tryside during the festive season of Dusshera in October and during the
wedding season in May and June, I saw numerous makeshift colorful
tents erected for all-night performances. The more remote the villages,
and the further their locations from towns, the larger the number of
makeshift performance tents, testifying to the persistence of this form of
entertainment in remote areas.
Not all masculine musical communities are purely performative, how-
ever, in the sense of a clear relationship between the performers and their
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
1 Mixed caste devotional singing in Misraulia.
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
3 Preparing for a singing session at the goddess temple in Misraulia, Chhapra.
Copyright © 2012. Duke University Press. All rights reserved.
4 Dalit singer, second from left, sings songs of the bard Bhikhari Thakur in Misraulia, Chhapra.
Unearthing Gender : Folksongs of North India, Duke University Press, 2012. ProQuest Ebook Central,
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