Mapping the Elite: Power, Privilege, and Inequality
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India is being widely seen as an emerging economic and political power on the global scene. Despite having the largest population of chronically poor in the world today, It is home to a sizeable number of thriving rich and flourishing middle classes. They are reshaping the country popular image and its self-imagination. Equally important are its political dynamics. With increasing participation of erstwhile-marginalized sections in the electoral process, The social profile of India’s political elite has been changing, making way for those coming from the middle and lower strata of the traditional social order, thus broadening the social base of political power. Mapping the elite seeks to expand the understanding of processes of formations and transformations of the Indian elite. The contributors explore the emergent elite spaces, the new idioms of power and inequality, the diverse strategies in which symbolic boundaries of privilege are traced in everyday lives, as well as the class mobilities in an age of proclaimed meritocracy. They do so by using the sociological frames of caste, Class, gender, community and their intersections. Series line exploring India’s elite: this series provides a platform to scholars working on elite dynamics in India. It seeks to enable an understanding of the nuances of inequality, power and other emerging social structures.
Surinder S. Jodhka, Professor, Centre for the Study of Social Systems, . School of Social Sciences. Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, Jules Naudet, Research Fellow, CNRS Paris
Surinder S. Jodhka is Professor at the Centre for the Study of Social Systems, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Jules Naudet is an alumnus of Sciences Po Paris and of the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales (Hindi) and holds a doctorate in Sociology. His doctoral research focused on a comparative analysis of the experience of upward social mobility in France, in India and in the United-States.