article

Migration and the commoditisation of ritual: sacrifice, spectacle and contestations in Kerala, India

Contributions to Indian sociology (n.s.)37 (1 & 2) • Published In 2003 • Pages: 109-139

By: Osella, Filippo, Osella, Caroline.

Abstract
This article discusses the effects on religious ritual arising from Kerala male out-migration to the Middle East. The focus is on an extremely expensive annual public ritual called kuthiyottam, which was customarily sponsored by a class of families from the upper Nayar caste. Beginning in the mid-1980s, Kerala men who accumulated wealth from working in Gulf States became important sources for sponsoring the ritual at different temples. This weakened the religious power and status of Nayar elites in favor of newly rich migrants, some of whom happened to be of previously despised lower-caste backgrounds. This power shift further transformed the ritual itself by injecting new aesthetic forms and religiosities.
Subjects
Organized ceremonial
Prayers and sacrifices
Labor supply and employment
Income and demand
Accumulation of wealth
Status, role, and prestige
Castes
Acculturation and culture contact
Sociocultural trends
Inter-community relations
Political movements
Religious experience
culture
Kerala
HRAF PubDate
2017
Region
Asia
Sub Region
South Asia
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Anthropologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Teferi Abate Adem
Field Date
1989-1996
Coverage Date
1930-2002
Coverage Place
Valiyagramam (pseudonym), Kerala, India
Notes
Filippo Osella and Caroline Osella
Includes bibliographical references (p. 136-139)
LCCN
200331269
LCSH
Kerala (India)