Social Change and Modernity: Identity Crisis of the Bonda Tribe in Pratibha Ray’s The Primal Land

Authors

  • S. Chitra Yonphula Centenary College, Royal University of Bhutan, Bhutan
  • Sangay Tenzin Ministry of Education, Bhutan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/sjah.v3i1.35357

Keywords:

Bonda tribe, identity, cultural practices, internal feud, modern development, socio-ethnic tension

Abstract

Pratibha Ray’s anthropological novel The Primal Land (1993) documents the history of India’s endangered Bonda tribe dwelling in the secluded mountains of Koraput, Odisha. Not free from the interferences of the outside world, the Bondas face the threat of losing their tribal identity. This complicated position and their struggle between existence and identity, an intersubjective reality, was triggered by oppressive internal and external surroundings due to the pressures of modernity. The discussion focuses on their inherent cultural practices causingconstant internal feuds and the government’s intrusion with development plans leading to exploitation, cultural dilution, and socio-ethnic tension. Thus the paper decodes the difficulties of the Bondas and concludes that their existence cannot be ensured without the loss of primal identity.

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Author Biography

S. Chitra, Yonphula Centenary College, Royal University of Bhutan, Bhutan

Postgraduate Department of English

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Published

2021-03-01

How to Cite

Chitra, S., & Tenzin, S. (2021). Social Change and Modernity: Identity Crisis of the Bonda Tribe in Pratibha Ray’s The Primal Land. SCHOLARS: Journal of Arts &Amp; Humanities, 3(1), 34–46. https://doi.org/10.3126/sjah.v3i1.35357

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Section

Articles