“In your writing I am existed”: reading the history of Anthropology via Textures of the Ordinary

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Bhrigupati Singh
Ana Paula Rodgers

Abstract

In this essay I try to suggest a non-teleological way of reading the history of anthropology, by placing Veena Das’s Textures of the ordinary (2020) in relation to her previous books, beginning with Structure and cognition: aspects of Hindu caste and ritual (1977).
Rather than a teleological movement from structuralism to “post-structuralism” or “self-reflexive” work, I point to the continuation and transfiguration of the concepts of structure and event across Das’s different books, as a way of also imagining movements within social theory more broadly, without each successive “paradigm” having to dialectically negate its predecessor. Further, I ask what it means to age or to “mature” within a body of scholarly work, and how we might take an author to be growing simultaneously older and younger, if we take aging in thought not necessarily to be solely a question of chronology or teleology.

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Author Biography

Bhrigupati Singh, Ashoka University - India

Associate Professor of Sociology and e Anthropology at Ashoka University, Sonipat, Haryana, Índia, and visitant Professor of Psyquiatry at the Carney Institute, Brown University (EUA). His first book, Poverty and the Quest for Life: Spiritual and Material Striving in Rural India (University of Chicago Press, 2015) was awarded by the American Institute of Indian Studies and the American Academy of Religion. He is coeditor of The Ground Between: Anthropological Engagements with Philosophy (Duke University Press, 2014) and of serie Thinking from Elsewhere (Fordham University Press). Currently, he works in a project on mental desease and helth in India, with field research in collaboration with the Department of Psychiatry at All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS Delhi), and have articles publiseh in Medical Anthropology Quarterly and Philosophy, Psychiatry, Psychology journals.

How to Cite

“In your writing I am existed”: reading the history of Anthropology via Textures of the Ordinary. EXILIUM Journal of Contemporary Studies, [S. l.], v. 3, n. 5, p. 193–205, 2022. DOI: 10.34024/exilium.v3i5.14659. Disponível em: https://periodicos.unifesp.br/index.php/exilium/article/view/14659. Acesso em: 5 dec. 2025.