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gutslithroat

small list of anti-caste literature

please feel free to add to this. preferably works by people who are not upper caste.

- Annihilation of Caste - Dr. B.R. Ambedkar

Caste 101. A must-read. Criticism of Hindu religious texts which propagate male dominance, the caste system. He argued that the only way caste could be destroyed was to also destroy its religious foundations.

- The Weave of my Life: A Dalit Woman’s Memoirs - Urmila Pawar

An autobiography wherein Pawar recounts her life (childhood in rural Western India, conversion to Buddhism, move to Bombay, and involvement in the movement for Dalit emancipation). Highlights the experiences of Dalit women. 

- Ants Among Elephants - Sujatha Gidla

She is a Dalit Christian who writes about how Dalits struggle to overcome poverty and social ostracization in post-Independence India. This is also a critique of upper caste independence fighters’ love for communist leaders and thinkers.

- Why I am Not a Hindu - Kancha Illaiah 

Influential in introducing the term dalitbahujan which means a social group consisting of Dalits/SCs/STs/OBCs/Shudra castes. He claims that dalitbahujan people cannot be called Hindu as all, as their social practices are so radically different from upper caste Hindus. Also aims to debunk Hindu fundamentalism.

- Outcaste - Narendra Jadhav

A memoir and the story of a Dalit family’s struggles across three generations and eighty years. Through this, he traces Dalit movements from pre to post Independence India.

- I Want to Destroy Myself - Malika Amar Sheikh

A memoir wherein she writes primarily about her marriage to Namdeo Dhasal (founder of Dalit Panthers and a poet) and highlights the experience of being a Dalit woman.

Here’s another reading list curated by Dalit voices

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Here are some diversified open-source syllabi and reading lists on race, gender, Kashmir, Palestine, caste, sexuality, colonialism and modernism, design and systems, feminism, anthropology, sociology, economics, political science, data and tech, labour studies, African studies, disability studies, violence and it’s textures by some amazing educators and activists. Reblog, share and email [email protected] to include more in the list!

  1. Decoloniszing Gender - khari jackson, Malcolm Shanks
  2. Modernity and Coloniality - Ahmed Ansari
  3. Design Thinking For Complex Systems- Ahmed Ansari
  4. Feminist and Social Justice Studies- Dr. Alex Ketchum
  5. Afrotectopia
  6. Design + Anthropology - Shannon Mattern
  7. “Shakespeare in the ‘Post'Colonies” -Amrita Dhar
  8. At the Intersection of Critical Race and Disability Studies: A Bibliography - Amrita Dhar
  9. Testimonials + local literature - Mountain Voices
  10. Introduction to Critical Race Theory for 2017- Adrienne Keene
  11. Mini Courses on Art and Culture - Asia Art Archive
  12. Sound and Violence, Sound as Violence - Pedro Oliveira
  13. Violence - Pedro Oliveira
  14. Border thinking and Border as culture - Pedro Oliveira
  15. Introduction to decolonial thinking and decolonising methodologies -Pedro Oliveira
  16. The Kashmir Syllabus - Stand With Kashmir
  17. Palestine Reading List - Danah Abdulla
  18. A Bibliography of Caste Readings - Jyothi James
  19. Decolonizing the Malabari Mind - Jyothi James
  20. Labour and Tech Reading List - Alexandra Mateescu and Eve Zelickson
  21. Diversifying your Design Syllabus: Recommended Readings by Women, Non-binary, and Culturally Diverse Authors - Hillary Carey
  22. Between Scarcity and Excess: Capitalism, Population Control and the Climate Crisis - Luiza Prado
  23. Decolonising Science Reading List - Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
  24. Everyday Orientalism - Katherine Blouin, Usama Ali Gad, Rachel Mairs

Also s/o to @fegeleh for compiling this amazing repository of essays, articles and books.

We have new additions!

  1. Islamophobia is Racism - Su’ad Abdul Khabeer, Arshad Ali, Evelyn Alsultany, Sohail Daulatzai, Lara Deeb, Carol Fadda, Zareena Grewal, Juliane Hammer, Nadine Naber, and Junaid Rana.
  2. Ferguson Syllabus - Sociologists for Justice
  3. #StandingRockSyllabus- NYC stands with Standing Rock
  4. Black Islam Syllabus - Dr. Kayla Renée Wheeler (You can donate to them via paypal)
  5. Puerto Rico Syllabus
  6. Charleston Syllabus- African American Intellectual History Society
  7. Immigration Syllabus - Immigration historians affiliated with theImmigration History Research Center at the University of Minnesota and the Immigration and Ethnic History Society
  8. Trump Syllabus 2.0 - Chronicle of Higher Education

Kosambi Circle  - A reading, writing, research, analysis, and discussion circle for multi-tendency socialist theory, based in India primarily but with members from all around the world joining in remotely as well. You can check out our database for syllabi here.

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33v0

what is it about capybaras that attracts groups of small animals to them? Its not just mammals either its like birds and turtles and frogs too

look at this shit

They radiate peace

capybaras are friend shaped

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gaylor-moon

I love this post

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cantavier

This is actually a cool thing I know about!

In the wild capybaras live in large groups so naturally a female capybara will take care of not only her own offspring, but all of the other offspring in the group. So capybaras are super great mothers who will adopt pretty much anything and take care of it.

Lots of places that rescue different animals will give a group of baby animals to a capybara to raise if they have one.

Like puppies

Ducks

Deer

Emus

They are just super calm animals so they’re naturally great at mothering or just existing in a group!

mom shaped

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proteus-no

here are some more cute pictures of them with rats and bunnies :,)

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hgk477

How to be a stranger

  1. Start in the morning by putting on a typical outfit.
  2. Change something about it. Wear a new scarf, hat, watch/wristband or obscure the eyes. Slightly different is better than completely different
  3. Leave your home. If you’re going somewhere familiar, take a slightly different route and arrive slightly later than usual.
  4. If you came by car, leave it somewhere safe for maybe a few hours. Locking the doors isn’t enough: if someone finds you, they’ll get in.
  5. You will be greeted by someone familiar. Acknowledge them, but do not look at or speak to them. A wave or nod will do, and they’ll be on their way.
  6. When you eat, eat outside. Try something new. Find a table you can keep to yourself, and leave a spot open across from you. Let no one sit there, no matter how desperately they ask.
  7. Always wear headphones. Listening to music is optional, but should you do so play something you have never heard before.
  8. You will be greeted by someone unfamiliar. Acknowledge them similarly in step 5, but you may look at them. If they confused you for someone else, it’s working.
  9. Avoid places where you are well known, if possible. If not, ignore them the best you can. You will feel the temptation of their comfort, their familiarity, and their security as you pass. Do not let the friendly faces claim you.
  10. People will ask you for directions, spare change, or similar assistance. You will not recognize a single one of them. Always stop and help, and always make the conversation as long and amiable as possible. Under no circumstances give your name.
  11. If you performed any of these steps incorrectly, go home immediately. If performed correctly, go home at your own leisure at the end of your day.
  12. When you return, look in your mirror, and try to recognize the person across from you. By this point, the process of experiencing your day as a different person will be complete, and this person will be part of you. Should you have any difficulty seeing yourself as you know, the day was successful.
  13. Go to sleep immediately and return to normalcy, if you can.

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ecrituria
“Do not be daunted by the insurmountability of the world’s grief. Do justly, now. Love mercy, now. Walk humbly, now. You are not obligated to complete the work but neither are you free to abandon it.”

— Rami Shapiro

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