Disciplining Dakans: Witchcraft, law and everyday lives in eighteenth-century Marwar

Mathew, Akhila (2025) Disciplining Dakans: Witchcraft, law and everyday lives in eighteenth-century Marwar. The Indian Economic and Social History Review, 62 (3). pp. 285-306. ISSN 0019-4646

[thumbnail of 542. mathew-2025-disciplining-dakans-witchcraft-law-and-everyday-lives-in-eighteenth-century-marwar.pdf]
Preview
Text - Published Version
Download (1MB) | Preview

Abstract

In the eighteenth century, numerous legal appeals concerning witchcraft, either by women labelled as dakans (roughly translated as ‘witches’) or by their accusers, were brought to the attention of the Marwar state for adjudication. Through an examination of these legal petitions, this article contributes to the scholarship on witchcraft in the subcontinent and other regions. Though speaking to this literature, this article will diverge from it in two ways. First, the article will shift the gaze from tribes to castes in precolonial India and, thereby, question the deep-seated assumption that the belief in witchcraft and other superstitions was confined to the former. Second, moving away from an imagination of witchcraft as being marked by incredible violence emanating from public spectacles of pain and torture, this article will make a case for reconceptualising witchcraft in the Marwar region as a phenomenon in which the occult coexisted with surprising ordinariness in the everyday lives of people.

Item Type: Article
Authors: Mathew, Akhila
Document Language:
Language
English
Subjects: Religion
Social sciences
Social sciences > Law
History & geography
Divisions: Azim Premji University - Bengaluru > School of Arts and Sciences
Full Text Status: Public
URI: http://publications.azimpremjiuniversity.edu.in/id/eprint/6885
Publisher URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/00194646251350789

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item