मराठी

Sanskritisation seems to justify a model that rests on inequality and exclusion. Explain this model. - Sociology

Advertisements
Advertisements

प्रश्न

Sanskritisation seems to justify a model that rests on inequality and exclusion. Explain this model.

थोडक्यात उत्तर
Advertisements

उत्तर

Sanskritisation is the process through which lower castes improve their position by adopting the values, traditions, and practices of the upper castes. This imitation is founded on inequality and exclusion since even if a certain group reaches the social ladder, there will still be an upper and lower class hierarchy. It conveys the idea that some castes and their customs will always be better than those of others, and that conforming to them is a source of humiliation from which one should run away.

shaalaa.com
Different Kinds of Social Change
  या प्रश्नात किंवा उत्तरात काही त्रुटी आहे का?
2022-2023 (March) Set 4

संबंधित प्रश्‍न

Kumudtai’s journey into Sanskrit began with great interest and eagerness with Gokhale Guruji, her teacher at school…At the University, the Head of the Department was a well-known scholar and he took great pleasure in taunting Kumudtai…Despite the adverse comments she successfully completed her Masters in Sanskrit…. Source: Kumud Pawade (1938)

Read the source and answer the following question.

Do you think sanskritisation is a gendered process? Give a reason for your answer.


On which of the following the influence of Sanskritisation could be seen?


The path of development called modernisation was taken up by ______.


Which social reformer was a philosopher, printer, writer, publisher, entrepreneur, etc.?


The impact of Sanskritisation is many-sided. Its influence can be seen in language, literature, ideology, music, dance, drama, style of life and ritual. It is primarily a process that takes place within the ______ space though Srinivas argued that it was visible even in sects and religious groups outside Hinduism.


Identify the concept that does not agree with Sanskritisation?


In regions where the non-Sanskritic castes were dominant, it was their influence that was stronger. Identify the most appropriate concept to refer this phenomenon?


The path of development called Modernisation was taken up by ______.


The term Sanskritisation was coined by ______.


Westernisation does involve the imitation of external forms of ______.


______ led people towards social mobility. 


With the growth of the ______ movement in the 20th century, there was an attempt in several Indian languages to drop Sanskrit words and phrases.


Using the example of Kumud Pawade, show how the process of sanskritisation is gendered.


Read the source and answer the question:

Ways of thinking
........ John Stuart Mill's essay 'On Liberty' soon after its publication became a text in Indian colleges. Indians came to know about Magna Carta and the struggle for liberty and equality in Europe and America.

Mention the kind of Westernization being referred to in the given source.


"Sanskritisation seems to justify a model that rests on inequality and exclusion." Give two reasons to support this statement.


Explain the phenomenon of Modernity as given by Rudolph and Rudolph.


Assertion (A): The impact of Sanskritisation is many sided.

Reason (R): Its influence can be seen in language, literature, ideology, music, dance, drama, style of life and ritual.


What is meant by 'Great Tradition?


Kumudtai’s journey into Sanskrit began with great interest and eagerness with Gokhale Guruji, her teacher at school… At the University, the Head of the Department was a well-known scholar and he took great pleasure in taunting Kumudtai…Despite the adverse comments she successfully completed her Masters in Sanskrit…. Source: Kumud Pawade (1938)

What does Kumud Pawade’s autobiography show us about the relation between gender and caste?


Share
Notifications

Englishहिंदीमराठी


      Forgot password?
Use app×