References
- Areeparampil, M. (1992). Forest Andolan in Singhbhum. In S. Narayan (Ed.), Jharkhand movement: Origin and evolution (pp. 144–188). Inter-India.
- Baines, J. A. (1893). General report on the census of India, 1891. Government of India Press.
- Banerjee, P. (2006). Culture/politics: The irresoluble double-bind of the Indian Adivasi. Indian Historical Review, 33(1), 99–126. https://doi.org/10.1177/037698360603300106
- Bourgois, P. (2001). The power of violence in war and peace: Post-Cold War lessons from El Salvador. Ethnography, 2(1), 5–34. https://doi.org/10.1177/14661380122230803
- Brunner, C. (2016). Knowing suicide terrorism? Tracing epistemic violence across scholarly expertise. Ethiopian Renaissance Journal of Social Sciences and the Humanities, 3(1), 3–20.
- Caldwell, R. (1856). A comparative grammar of the dravidian or south Indian family of languages. Harrison.
- Chakrabarty, D. (1992). Postcoloniality and the artifice of history: Who speaks for “Indian” pasts? Representations, 32(Winter), 1–26. https://doi.org/10.2307/2928652
- Chandra, U. (2013). Liberalism and its other: The politics of primitivism in colonial and postcolonial Indian law. Law and Society Review, 47(1), 135–168. https://doi.org/10.1111/lasr.12004
- Chatterjee, P. (2008). Democracy and economic transformation in India. Economic and Political Weekly, 43(16), 53–62.
- Chatterjee, P. (2010). Empire and nation: Essential writings 1985–2005. Permanent Black.
- Cohn, B. (1996). Colonialism and its forms of knowledge: The British in India. Princeton University Press.
- Corbridge, S. (1986). State tribe and religion: Policy and politics in India’s Jharkhand 1900–1980 [Unpublished doctoral Dissertation]. University of Cambridge.
- Corbridge, S. (1993). Ousting Singbonga: The struggle for India’s Jharkhand. In R. Peter (Ed.), Dalit movements and the meaning of labour in India (pp. 121–150). Oxford University Press.
- Corbridge, S., Jewitt, S., & Kumar, S. (2004). Jharkhand: Environment, development, ethnicity. Oxford University Press.
- Dalton, E. T. (1973 rpnt). Descriptive ethnology of Bengal. Indian Studies Past and Present.
- Das Gupta, S. (2011). Adivasis and the Raj: Socio-economic Transition of the Hos, 1820–1932. Orient Blackswan.
- Das Gupta, S. (2015). Customs, rights and identity: Adivasi women in eastern India. Anglistica AION, 19(1), 93–104. https://doi.org/10.19231/angl-aion.201518
- Fanon, F. (1952/1970). Black skin, white masks. Paladin. (Original work published 1952)
- FAO. (2006). State of the world’s forests 2005.
- Galtung, J. (1969). Violence, peace, and peace research. Journal of Peace Research, 6(3), 167–191. https://doi.org/10.1177/002234336900600301
- Galtung, J. (1975). Peace: Research, education, action. In Essays in peace research (Vol. 1). PRIO monograph Series. Christian Ejlers.
- Ghurye, G. S. (1943). The aboriginals, so-called and their future. Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics.
- Guha, B. S. (1935). The racial affinities of the peoples of India. Census of India, 1931 (Vol. 1, Part III A). Government of India Press.
- Guha, S. (1999). Environment and ethnicity in India, 1201–1991. Cambridge University Press.
- Guha, R. (2007). Adivasis, Naxalites and Indian democracy. Economic and Political Weekly, 42(32), 3305–3312.
- Harriss, J. (2011). What is going on in India’s “Red Corridor”? Questions about India’s Maoist insurgency – Literature review. Pacific Affairs, 84(2), 309–327. https://doi.org/10.5509/2011842309
- Hunter, W. W. (1868/1966). Annals of rural Bengal. Smith, Elder and Co. (Original work published 1868)
- Jewitt, S. (2008). Political ecology of Jharkhand conflicts. Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 49(1), 68–82. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8373.2008.00361.x
- Karlsson, B. G. (2011). Unruly hills: Nature and nation in India’s northeast. Orient Blackswan and Social Science Press.
- Karlsson, B. G., & Subba, T. B. (Eds.). (2006). Indigeneity in India. Kegan Paul.
- Kumar, D., & Puthumattathil, A. (2018). A critique of development in India’s predominantly Adivasi regions with special reference to the Hos of India’s Jharkhand. Contemporary Voice of Dalit, 10(1), 10–27. https://doi.org/10.1177/2455328X17744627
- Mahato, P. P. (2000). Sanskritization versus Nirbakization. Sujan Publishers.
- Metcalf, T. (1998). Ideologies of the Raj. The New Cambridge History of India III.4. Cambridge University Press.
- Mitra, K. (2020). Colonial attitudes to the “Tribes” of Bengal [Unpublished doctoral Dissertation]. University of Calcutta.
- Nilsen, A. G. (2018). Adivasis and the state: Subalternity and citizenship in India’s Bhil Heartland. Cambridge University Press.
- Padel, F. (2009). Sacrificing people: Invasions of a tribal landscape. Orient Blackswan.
- Peluso, N. L., & Watts, M. (2001). Violent environments. Cornell University Press.
- Prakash, A. (2001). Jharkhand: Politics of development and identity. Orient Longman.
- Radhakrishnan, M. (2001). Dishonoured by history: ‘criminal tribes’ and British colonial policy. Orient Longman.
- Rao, N. (2008). “Good women do not inherit land”: politics of land and gender in India. Social Science Press and Orient Blackswan.
- Rupavath, R. (2016). Confronting everyday humiliation: Response from an Adivasi. Economic and Political Weekly, 51(31), 16–19.
- Sen, S. (2016). Race, aboriginality and the Adivasi: Some implication for the Andaman Islanders. In F. Heidemann & P. Zehmisch (Eds.), Manifestations of history: Time, space and community in the Andaman Islands (pp. 75–95). Primus Books.
- Shah, A. (2010). In the shadows of the state: Indigenous politics, environmentalism, and insurgency in Jharkhand, India. Duke University Press.
- Shah, A. (2013a). Response to Nandini Sundar’s response to “the tensions overcitizenship in a marxist-leninist revolutionary situation: The Maoists in India”. Critique of Anthropology, 33(4), 476–479. https://doi.org/10.1177/0308275X13506662
- Shah, A. (2013b). The tensions over liberal citizenship in a marxist revolutionary situation: The Maoists in India. Critique of Anthropology, 33(1), 91–109. https://doi.org/10.1177/0308275X12466679
- Shah, A., & Jain, D. (2017). Naxalbari at its golden jubilee: Fifty recent books on the Maoist movement in India. Modern Asian Studies, 51(4), 1165–1219. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X16000792
- Sharma, K. (2018). Mapping violence in the lives of Adivasi women: A study from Jharkhand. Economic and Political Weekly, 53(42), 44–52.
- Shaw, T. (1798). On the inhabitants of the hills near Rajámahall. Asiatic Researches, 4, 31–96.
- Singh, K. S. (1985). Tribal society in India. Manohar.
- Sinha, S. S. (2015). Culture of violence or violence of cultures? Adivasis and Witch-hunting in Chotanagpur. Anglistica AION, 19(1), 105–120. https://doi.org/10.19231/angl-aion.201519
- Sivaramakrishnan, K. (1999). Modern forests: Statemaking and environmental change in colonial eastern India. Oxford University Press.
- Skaria, A. (1999). Hybrid histories: Forests, frontiers and wildness in western India. Oxford University Press.
- Smith, G. (1888). Stephen Hislop: Pioneer missionary and naturalist in central India. John Murray.
- Spivak, G. C. (1988). Can the subaltern speak? In C. Nelson & L. Grossberg (Eds.), Marxism and the interpretation of culture (pp. 271–313). University of Illinois Press.
- Sundar, N. (2002). Village histories: Coalescing the past and present. In P. Chatterjee & A. Ghosh (Eds.), History and the present (pp. 144–182). Permanent Black.
- Sundar, N. (2011). The rule of law and citizenship in central India: Post-colonial dilemmas. Citizenship Studies, 15(3-4), 419–432. https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2011.564804
- Sundar, N. (2012). Violent social conflicts in India’s forests: Society, state and the market. In Deeper roots of historical injustice: Trends and challenges in the forests of India (pp. 13–32). RRI.
- Sundar, N. (2013). Reflections on civil liberties, citizenship, Adivasi agency and maoism: A response to Alpa Shah. Critique of Anthropology, 33(3), 361–368. https://doi.org/10.1177/0308275X13491040
- Sundar, N. (2019). Adivasi politics and state responses: Historical processes and contemporary concerns. In S. Das Gupta & R. S. Basu (Eds.), Narratives from the margins: Aspects of Adivasi history in India (pp. 241–258). Primus Books.
- Sutton, D. (2011). Other landscapes: Colonialism and the predicament of authority in nineteenth century south India. Orient Blackswan.
- Wallace, R. G. (1824). Memoirs of India. Longman.