Many thanks to the originator of this thread!
Right now, I just want to register the fact that I’m very much interested in this topic.
Last year (May 2015), I had a publication (in Tamil) about references to, or a lack there of, “jāti” and “caste” (as we understand it today) in Old Tamil literature/grammar, also known as Sangam literature/grammar.
I don’t know how many of you are aware of the fact that the English word “caste” has its origin in the Portuguese word “casta,” which was first recorded in Arte da Lingua Malabar written by Fr. Henrique Henriques in the mid-16th century.
If one wants to dig deep into the understanding of the terms such as “jāti” and “caste” … one has to have a minimal understanding of the origins of the Western contact with India, which happened in the early 16-th century through Portuguese arrival in South India.
Thanks and regards,
V.S.Rajam
Dear Don,
This interests me a lot, and I'd be grateful to read what you might write about it in future. It's on my back-burner, but I've long wondered whether Sanskritic narratives about jati and varna can be thought about in ways similar to eighteenth and nineteenth century European narratives about races and species. Were people of different varnas formally considered to be of different "species?" It's a bit shocking to think in these terms, but I've been wondering about it. If you ever put flesh on these bones, one way or another, or can point me to existing discussions on this, I'd be really interested.
Best,
Dominik
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