Available Formats
Reform, Identity and Narratives of Belonging: The Heraka Movement in Northeast India
By (Author) Dr Arkotong Longkumer
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
3rd November 2011
NIPPOD
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
East Asian religions
Religion and politics
Hinduism
299.54
Paperback
274
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Reform, Identity and Narratives of Belonging focuses on the Heraka, a religious reform movement, and its impact on the Zeme, a Naga tribe, in the North Cachar Hills of Assam, India. Drawing upon critical studies of religion', cultural/ethnic identity, and nationalism, archival research in both India and Britain, and fieldwork in Assam, the book initiates new grounds for understanding the evolving notions of reform' and identity' in the emergence of a Heraka religion'. Arkotong Longkumer argues that reform' and identity' are dynamically inter-related and linked to the revitalisation and negotiation of both tradition' legitimising indigeneity, and change' legitimising reform. The results have deepened, yet challenged, not only prevailing views of the Western construction of the category religion' but also understandings of how marginalised communities use collective historical imagination to inspire self-identification through the discourse of religion. In conclusion, this book argues for a re-evaluation of the way in which multi-religious traditions interact to reshape identities and belongings.
"This is a compelling and unusual book, written from the inside (by a Naga) and the outside (by a skilled anthropologist). It is a valuable addition both theoretically and ethnographically to a rich literature on the Nagas and to the rapidly expanding field of comparative religion. It is beautifully written and gradually reveals an extraordinary world with great sensitivity." - Professor Alan Macfarlane, F.B.A., Emeritus Professor of Anthropological Science and Fellow of King's College, Cambridge.
The authors personal encounters and fieldwork experiences enliven this greatly textured study... The references to theoretical sources...are useful for setting the data within wider socio-historical and anthropological debates. -- Suzanne Owen, Leeds Trinity University, UK * Temenos: Nordic Journal of Comparative Religion *
Dr Arkotong Longkumer isVisiting Lecturer in Religious Studies at the University of Edinburgh, UK.