Land, Life, and Emotional Landscapes at the Margins of Bangladesh
Abstract
Drawing on two years of ethnographic research in the north-eastern borderlands of Bangladesh, this book focuses on the everyday struggles of indigenous farmers threatened with losing their land due to such state programmes as the realignment of the national border, ecotourism, social forestry and the establishment of a military cantonment. In implementing these programmes, state actors challenge farmers’ right to land, instituting spaces of violence in which multiple forms of marginalisation overlap and are reinforced. Mapping how farmers react to these challenges emotionally and practically, the book argues that these land conflicts serve as a starting point for existentially charged disputes in which the survival efforts of farmers clash with the political imaginations and practices of the nation-state. The analysis shows that losing land represents more than being deprived of a material asset: it is nothing less than the extinction of ways of life.
Keywords
Bangladesh, borderlands, nation-sate, indigenous, violence, agency, anthropology of life, land dispossessionDOI
10.5117/9789463721752ISBN
9789463721752, 9789048553365Publisher
Amsterdam University PressPublisher website
https://www.aup.nl/Publication date and place
Amsterdam, 2022Series
Transforming Asia, 7Classification
Political economy
Social and cultural anthropology
Cultural studies: food and society