Postcolonial Trauma in the Lives of Indian Tribes

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Nihal Zainab   & H. Sofia2  
1,2 B. S. Abdur Rahman Crescent Institute of Science & Technology, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.

 Rupkatha Journal, Special Issue on Poetics of Self-construal in Postcolonial Literature, 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n5.11
[Article History: Received: 13 October 2023. Revised: 25 December 2023. Accepted: 26 December 2023. Published: 27 December 2023]
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Abstract

India is a country that is home to 1.4 billion people. These people are part of wide and intricate groups, communities, castes and tribes. While close to 91.4% of the Indian population has progressed into the colonial standard of civilization, according to the Census Report 2011, about 8.6% of people are still living in their original and natural way of life. These people are the tribes of India whose way of life has been romanticized as the ‘Indian Culture’. A section of tribal people continues to live in mountains, and forests and construct only mud houses or huts. They have little access to basic amenities like healthcare, education, electricity and water. While few tribes have moved out of their original ways of life by converting to other religions, certain tribes are still governed by their respective leaders, following the religions and customs that were taught to them centuries ago. It is at times difficult for the State Governments to reach the tribes since most of them resist any such advancements. European Colonization of India led to the discovery of several tribes that were until that point in time living in harmony with nature and forests. This paper will analyze through literature the pre-colonial and post-colonial lives of certain Indian tribes living in the mountains of Kerala and Tamil Nadu.

Keywords: tribes, trauma, assimilation, resistance, decolonization, Indian Culture.

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Citation: Zainab, N. & Sofia, H. (2023). Postcolonial Trauma in the Lives of Indian Tribes. Rupkatha Journal 15:5. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n5.11