Dalit engagement with caste and society a study of the nineteenth century subaltern novels in Malayalam
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St Josephs College Devagiri, University of Calicut
Abstract
This thesis examines Dalit engagement with caste and society in nineteenth-century
Kerala, focusing on early subaltern Malayalam novels: Frances Wright Collins'
Ghathakavadhom (1877), Archdeacon Koshy’s Pullelikunju (1882), and Potheri
Kunhambu’s Saraswativijayam (1892). Drawing from subaltern historiography and
Partha Chatterjee’s framework on caste and subaltern consciousness, this study
critically analyses how these works interrogate caste oppression and untouchability,
exposing the deeply entrenched, dehumanizing nature of the caste system. The
novels reveal the intersection of caste subjugation and colonial modernity,
illustrating how missionary-led reforms and education fostered Dalit agency,
enabling resistance to caste-based inequalities. Situated within the broader
framework of subaltern history, the study highlights how these narratives articulate
victimization in the name of caste, as well as resistance and the reimagining of
social structures. By exploring the dynamic interplay between caste, society, and
literature, the thesis contributes to the broader discourses on caste subalternity and
the socio-political currents of nineteenth-century Kerala. Anchored in key
theoretical positions, particularly Partha Chatterjee’s assertion that caste, rather than
class, should be the central lens through which subaltern consciousness is
understood in the Indian context, the study also builds on the subaltern
historiographical claim that elite and subaltern consciousness exist in constant
tension and conflict. Drawing on Chatterjee’s interpretation of Gramsci’s concept of
rupture in common sense, this thesis offers a nuanced exploration of caste and social
hierarchies in nineteenth century subaltern novels in Malayalam.
