Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Murdered with no moral restraint

Nobody's People (Stanford University Press, 2020) takes us into the world of the Kanjars, often considered thieves. Introducing us to wily policemen, quirky aristocrats, and resourceful goddesses, the author shows that hierarchy is a potent normative idiom through which Kanjars imagine better lives and pursue social ambitions. A community once patronized secretly by aristocrats and now precariously in the service of farmers and the police, Kanjars try and fail repeatedly to find a way into hierarchic relations rather than out of them. In a world where to be is to belong, they are nobody's people, those who can be murdered with no moral restraint or remorse. Following Kanjars on their journey between death and hope, Anastasia Piliavsky invites readers to see in hierarchy-not inequality-a viable ethical frame instead of an archaic system of subjugation.