| dc.description.abstract |
The Hindu society in India is built on layers of mythology, ritual, and belief that
have shaped its social and cultural consciousness for a long time. The caste system is a
big part of this structure. It is not just a social hierarchy; it is also a cultural framework
that tells people how to live, worship, and interact with the holy. Each caste and subcaste
has its own gods, rituals, and holy places, all of which show its historical status
and social identity. In this larger context, folk deities play an important role in Tamil
Nadu’s religious life. These local gods, who are often not part of the Brahmanical
temple system, represent the lively traditions, memories, and problems of rural
communities. They are not distant gods, but nearby beings that protect, restore, and
embody the essence of those who worship them. In Northern Tamil Nadu, the worship of folk deities serves as a social structure
that maintains and defines caste divisions. The positioning of shrines, the ritual duties
assigned to particular families, and the inherited roles of priests all demonstrate that
worship reflects social hierarchy. These rituals bring people together to celebrate as
a group, but they also subtly reinforce differences in purity, pollution, and privilege.
In this context, worship serves both as a unifying tradition and as a mechanism of
exclusion, perpetuating inequality within the discourse of devotion. This study employs frameworks from folklore and subaltern studies to analyze the
interrelation of caste, culture, and history in the reverence of these deities. Folklore is
viewed not solely as a compilation of archaic narratives but as a dynamic discourse
of power—a mechanism through which groups interpret their surroundings and
construct their identity within them. The myths and rituals associated with folk deities
exemplify how, historically, dominant groups have sanctified authority, whereas
oppressed castes have reinterpreted these traditions as manifestations of assertion and
resistance. This study views folk deities as sociocultural constructs that reflect and
sustain the caste hierarchy of Tamil society, rather than merely as religious figures.
They are ever-changing symbols that connect faith to power, belief to hierarchy, and history to identity. By looking at them, I can see how everyday devotion keeps up (and sometimes challenges) the cultural lines that define Tamil life. |
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