Tempest in a tea pot: analysis of contemporary witch hunts in the tea plantations of Bengal
Chaudhuri, Soma
:
2008-08-04
Abstract
In my dissertation I use a variety of qualitative methods (case study, in depth interviews and ethnography) to analyze how a migrant labor community uses “extreme deviance” as a form of protest. Using contemporary cases of witch hunts among the tribal migrant laborers in the tea plantations of India, I examine the causes behind individual incidents of witch hunts over a twenty six year time period. Specifically, I am interested in how the conflicts within the plantations between the management and the workers have an influence on the workers lives and whether witch hunts are a manifestation of protests against the plantation management. The tribal communities in India have a reputation for the belief and persecution of witches, and in the recent decades, incidents of witch hunts have been a major concern among the plantation community. Using theories of deviance and gender power structure, I examine what defines a deviant (in this case a “witch”) in the tribal labor community and what social conditions lead to a “suitable” labeling of a deviant (in this case branding or labeling an individual as a witch).