Limit search to available items
Record 31 of 42
Previous Record Next Record
Book Cover
E-book
Author Subramanian, Ajantha, 1969- author.

Title The caste of merit engineering education in India Ajantha Subramanian
Published Cambridge, Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2019
©2019

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Contents The colonial career of technical knowledge -- Building the IITs -- Challenging hierarchies of value in Madras -- IIT Madras's 1960s generation -- Testing merit -- Contesting reservations -- Brand IIT
Summary Just as Americans least disadvantaged by racism are most likely to call their country post-racial, Indians who have benefited from upper-caste affiliation rush to declare their country a post-caste meritocracy. Ajantha Subramanian challenges this belief, showing how the ideal of meritocracy serves the reproduction of inequality in Indian education
Just as those who have been least disadvantaged by their racial identity often announce that Americans live in a post-racial era, those who have historically benefited from their caste affiliation rush to declare that India is a post-caste nation. In The Caste of Merit, Ajantha Subramanian addresses the controversial relationships between technical education and caste formation and economic stratification in modern India. Through a series of in-depth studies of the elite Indian Institute of Technology (IIT)-the institutions Nehru once described as modern India's new temples-she explains that caste has not disappeared from India. On the contrary, it has acquired a kind of disturbing invisibility. Caste is now borne by the lower castes who invoke their affiliation in the public, political arena to claim resources from the state. The upper castes, by contrast, treat such discussions as backward and embarrassing. Caste privilege, Subramanian argues, is certainly working in India. But it has been transformed by a new discourse of "merit." Reservations or quotas for historically disadvantaged groups, much like affirmative action in the United States, are a subject of great import in India. Admission to colleges and employment in the public sector are two of the most hotly debated subjects when it comes to quotas. Meanwhile, lynchings, gang rapes, ritual humiliation, and political intimidation of low-caste Indians appear in newspaper headlines and on social media timelines with frightening regularity. It is within this dangerous context that Subramanian's provocative and empirically based argument about the dominance of Brahmins in the Indian Institutes of Technology must be read.-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Indian Institute of Technology (Chennai, India)
SUBJECT Indian Institute of Technology (Chennai, India) fast
Subject Caste -- India.
Caste-based discrimination -- India
Discrimination in education -- India
Educational equalization -- India
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural & Social.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural.
Caste
Caste-based discrimination
Discrimination in education
Educational equalization
India
Form Electronic book
ISBN 0674243471
9780674243477
9780674987883
0674987888