Uprising of the Fools

Pilgrimage as Moral Protest in Contemporary India

Hardcover, 256 pages

English language

Published Jan. 19, 2017 by Stanford University Press.

ISBN:
978-1-5036-0037-9
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The Kanwar is India's largest annual religious pilgrimage. Millions of participants gather sacred water from the Ganga and carry it across hundreds of miles to dispense as offerings in Śiva shrines. These devotees—called bhola, gullible or fools, and seen as miscreants by many Indians—are mostly young, destitute men, who have been left behind in the globalizing economy. But for these young men, the ordeal of the pilgrimage is no foolish pursuit, but a means to master their anxieties and attest their good faith in unfavorable social conditions.

Vikash Singh walked with the pilgrims of the Kanwar procession, and with this book, he highlights how the procession offers a social space where participants can prove their talents, resolve, and moral worth. Working across social theory, phenomenology, Indian metaphysics, and psychoanalysis, Singh shows that the pilgrimage provides a place in which participants can simultaneously recreate and prepare for the poor, informal …

2 editions

Subjects

  • Pilgrims and pilgrimages
  • Religion and social status
  • Capitalism
  • India, religion
  • India, social life and customs