When Brotherhood Ends at Food: Reflections on the Boycott Over a Scheduled Caste Cook’s Appointment at Muribahal Block, Balangir (Odisha)

Introduction

Food as a Social Boundary: Why Equality Stops at Shared Eating

Beyond MADA: When Development Meets Untouchability

Conditional Brotherhood: Equality and the Limits of Recognition

Dalit Women, Care Labour, and the Burden of Equality

Conclusion

What Kind of Brotherhood Survives Equality?

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This Post Has 5 Comments

  1. Anonymous

    💙

  2. Sangeeta Nag

    I read your article and found it genuinely thought-provoking. What impressed me most was your concept of ” *Conditional Brotherhood* .” It is a novel and intellectually engaging idea. Rather than simply describing the Anganwadi incident, you use it to develop a broader sociological and historical argument about equality, dignity, and the limits of solidarity.

    I also appreciated that you did not treat the incident merely as a news event or an administrative dispute. Instead, you connected it to larger questions of food, untouchability, dignity, care, the role of the state, and SC ST relations. This gives the article a much wider analytical scope and makes it more than just a commentary on a single incident.

    Thank you so much for writing on such an important and much-needed issue💙

  3. Ratnakar Bemal

    Very sensitive issue.probably divide and rule policy has been adopted

  4. Priyanka

    Thank you so much Dr. Swati for such a powerful and well explained contribution💙

  5. Swati

    My sincere gratitude to Sangeeta Nag, Priyanka, and Ratnakar Bemal Sir for taking the time to read and engage with this article. Your insights and encouragement are greatly appreciated.

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